Holocene glacier length variations along the American Cordilleras from paired 14C-10Be measurements

Andrew Jones

Abstract: Rising global temperatures in the industrial era have led to the smallest observed glacier lengths since record keeping began a few centuries ago. The degree to which modern glacier size is anomalous within the context of the Holocene, however, remains largely unknown. Here, we present cosmogenic in situ 14C and 10Be measurements in recently exposed proglacial bedrock for 10 glaciers spanning 60º N to 60º S along the American Cordilleras in order to quantitatively assess if modern alpine glaciers are at their smallest extents of the Holocene.

We collected ~5 bedrock samples at each glacier abutting modern ice along a transect perpendicular to flow. 10Be exposure ages represent cumulative exposure durations during the Holocene, while 14C is used to infer burial, as 14C will experience significant decay (t1/2 = 5,700 years) when shielded from nuclide production by ice on Holocene time scales. Because nuclide concentrations can only provide cumulative exposure and burial durations, observed 14C/10Be ratios were compared to 100,000 possible exposure-burial histories by Monte Carlo simulation to quantify when glaciers advanced or retreated during the Holocene.

Modeled glacier extents for 4 tropical glaciers, 1 glacier in the Sierra-Nevada, CA, and 1 in Patagonia, CL are at their smallest extent of the Holocene, providing evidence that present-day warming may have already exceeded the warmest periods of the Holocene. Other study sites in the Northern and Southern hemispheres (30-60º) exhibit a transition from smaller to larger glaciers during the mid-Holocene, suggesting a late Holocene cooling trend that is in agreement with global proxy data, but contrasts climate model simulations.

Time: April 22nd (11:45)

Advisor: Shaun Marcott

Co-Authors: Andrew L Gorin, Tori M Kennedy, Shaun A Marcott, Jeremy D Shakun, Brent M Goehring, Gordon R Bromley, Douglas H Clark, Andrew Hein, Vincent Jomelli, Emilio Mateo, Bryan Mark, Brian Menounos, Don Rodbell, Andrew Wickert.

Stream: Zoom

Email: agjones3@wisc.edu