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The last deglaciation of the Franz Victoria Trough, northern Barents Sea
Authors:DAVID J. LUBINSKI  SERGEY KORSUN  LEONID POLYAK  STEVEN L. FORMAN  SCOTT J. LEHMAN  FRANCES A. HERLIHY  GIFFORD H. MILLER
Affiliation:Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research and Department of Geological Sciences, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309–0450, USA;Murmansk Marine Biological Institute, 17, Vladimirskaya St., Murmansk, 183010, Russia;Byrd Polar Research Center, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210–1002, USA;Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA 02543, USA
Abstract:A study of two piston cores and a 3.5 kHz seismic profile from the Franz Victoria Trough provides new stratigraphic, stable isotopic and foraminiferal AMS 14C data that help constrain the timing of ice-sheet retreat in the northern Barents Sea and the nature of the deglacial marine environment. Silty diamicton at the base of each core, interpreted as till or ice-marginal debris flow, suggests that the Barents ice sheet was grounded at the core sites (470 m water depth). Eight AMS 14C dates on sediment overlying the diamicton indicate that the ice sheet retreated from both core sites by 12.9 ka and that postglacial sedimentation began 10 ka ago. These dates, combined with a recently published 14C date from a nearby core, suggest that the Franz Victoria Trough may not have been deglaciated until c . 13 ka, 2000 years later than modeled ice-sheet reconstructions indicate. In the trough, oxygen isotopic ratios in planktonic foraminifera N. pachyderma (sinistral) were 0.5–0.750, lower during deglaciation than after, probably as a result of ice-sheet and/or iceberg melting. Foraminiferal assemblages suggest that Atlantic-derived intermediate water may have begun to penetrate the trough c . 13 ka ago.
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