Northeastern Section - 50th Annual Meeting (23–25 March 2015)

Paper No. 10
Presentation Time: 11:25 AM

WAS BOLLING WARMING RECORDED BY THE SOUTHEASTERN MARGIN OF THE LAURENTIDE ICE SHEET? - A WORK IN PROGRESS


BORNS, Harold W.1, HALL, Brenda1, NURSE, Andrea M.2 and THOMPSON, Woodrow B.3, (1)Department of Earth Sciences/Climate Change Institute, University of Maine, 224 Bryand Global Sciences Center, Orono, ME 04469, (2)Climate Change Institute, University of Maine, 303 Bryand Global Sciences Center, Orono, ME 04469, (3)Maine Geological Survey, 93 State House Station, Augusta, ME 04333-0093, borns@maine.edu

The effect of prominent climate events, such as the Bolling warming (13,000 14C yr. B.P.). on the dynamics of the Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS) remains unknown, and yet had important implications 1) for understanding the impact of climate changes on the largest temperate ice sheet, and 2) for assessing the possible contributions the LIS could have made to global meltwater pulse 1A and sea-level changes in general.

Keeping in mind the current chronological limitations, the detailed emerged glacial and glacial-marine record in coastal Maine is interpreted at present as resulting from a slow, fluctuating recession of a low-profile ice sheet, followed by steepening of the profile and readvance, which terminated with deposition of the very prominent Pineo Ridge Moraine Complex (PRC), a record that tentatively is extended across Maine into New Hampshire. Emplacement of the PRC was followed by “abrupt” melt down of the ice to the north. This led to an extensive esker system that terminates against the PRC. Based upon the few relevant 14C dates, the rate of ice-margin recession south of the PRC was approximately 10m/yr, where as that to the north increased from 30-40 to 150 m/yr.

Current chronological and ecological research indicates that the Maine deglacial stratigraphy, developed for the time between approximately 14,000 and 12,500 14C yr B.P., parallels the temperature reconstructions for Oldest Dryas and the subsequent abrupt onset of Bolling warming. This indicates that deglaciation was driven by atmospheric rather than marine events.