| Literature DB >> 29051588 |
Camilla S Andresen1, Ulla Kokfelt2, Marie-Alexandrine Sicre3, Mads Faurschou Knudsen4, Laurence M Dyke2, Vincent Klein3, Fanny Kaczmar3, Martin W Miles5,6, David Wangner2.
Abstract
The early 2000s accelerated ice-mass loss from large outlet glaciers in W and SE Greenland has been linked to warming of the subpolar North Atlantic. To investigate the uniqueness of this event, we extend the record of glacier and ocean changes back 1700 years by analyzing a sediment core from Sermilik Fjord near Helheim Glacier in SE Greenland. We show that multidecadal to centennial increases in alkenone-inferred Atlantic Water SSTs on the shelf occurred at times of reduced solar activity during the Little Ice Age, when the subpolar gyre weakened and shifted westward promoted by atmospheric blocking events. Helheim Glacier responded to many of these episodes with increased calving, but despite earlier multidecadal warming episodes matching the 20th century high SSTs in magnitude, the glacier behaved differently during the 20th century. We suggest the presence of a floating ice tongue since at least 300 AD lasting until 1900 AD followed by elevated 20th century glacier calving due to the loss of the tongue. We attribute this regime shift to 20th century unprecedented low sea-ice occurrence in the East Greenland Current and conclude that properties of this current are important for the stability of the present ice tongues in NE Greenland.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29051588 PMCID: PMC5648833 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-13246-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Map of the North Atlantic region showing the major surface ocean currents[13] (colour of arrows indicate temperature; red = warm, blue = cold, yellow = mixture) and location of sites referred to in Fig. 3a–f. HG = Helheim Glacier; KG = Kangerdlugssuaq Glacier; JI = Jakobshavn Isbræ. Magenta circles show location of sediment cores discussed in the text and shown on Figs 2 and 3. The magenta box delineates the extent of the inset map. Bathymetric data are from IBCAO v3[56]. Terrestrial topographic data are from the ETOPO1 Global Relief model[57] and the GIMP surface digital elevation model[58]. The inset map of Sermilik Fjord shows the location of sediment core ER07 and the local bathymetry[59]. The figure was created using ArcMap 10.1 (http://desktop.arcgis.com/en/arcmap/) and Adobe Illustrator CS6 ( http://www.adobe.com/products/illustrator.html).
Figure 3Core ER07 data from Sermilik Fjord and solar activity. (a) Solar irradiance reconstruction[60]. (b) SST reconstruction from core ER07 in Sermilik Fjord, SE Greenland based on alkenone thermometry (this study). (c) Green line: sand flux in core ER07 used as a proxy for relative iceberg rafting (green shading: reconstruction augmented 300–1900 AD). In order to compare the lower and higher resolution portions of the IRD record, a 32 years binning was applied in data younger than 1900 AD (32 year is the average time resolution of samples older than 1900 AD). The original raw data are shown as a thin grey line. Grey stippled arrows indicate concurrent ER07 SST and ice rafting peaks. Grey bars indicate periods when increased SST concurs with low solar activity.
Figure 2Paleoclimate records off and near Greenland. (a) Flux of calcareous foraminera in core 248260–2 (Ameralik Fjord, SW Greenland) as indicator of subsurface ocean warming[39]. (b) Relative amount (%) of foraminifera C. neoteretis in core PO 243–451 (Igaliku Fjord, SW Greenland) as indicator of ocean subsurface warming[40]. (c) Alkenone-based SST reconstruction from sediment core ER07 (Sermilik Ford, SE Greenland, this study). (d) Thermocline temperature reconstruction based in Mg/Ca in G. inflata from core RAPiD-17–5P plotted on a reversed Y axis (Iceland Basin)[28]. (e) Diatom-based August SST reconstruction from core MD99–2322 (Kangerdlugssuaq Trough, SE Greenland)[26]. (f) Diatom-based April sea-ice concentration anomalies in the same core as (e). (g) Greenland Sea winter sea-ice extent reconstruction of the Western Nordic Seas based on tree-ring widths and ice core 18O records from Fennoscandia and Svalbard, respectively[43]. (h) Fram Strait sea-ice export reconstruction from the Storis index; a proxy for sea-ice in the EGC[46]. Grey lines on (d) and (e) show 5-yr running means.