ACID-3 Workshop, October 16-17, 2006.INTRODUCTION The Atlantic Canada Ice Dynamics (ACID) workgroup comprises geoscientists in fields such as marine geophysics, sedimentology sedimentology Scientific discipline concerned with the physical and chemical properties of sedimentary rocks and the processes involved in their formation, including transportation, deposition, and lithification of sediments. , oceanography, remote sensing, geomorphology, glacial geology, geochronology geochronology Dating and interpretation of geologic events in the history of the Earth. The classical technique of geochronology was stratigraphy, including faunal succession. , glaciology glaciology Scientific discipline concerned with all aspects of ice on landmasses. It deals with the structure and properties of glacier ice, its formation and distribution, the dynamics of ice flow, and the interactions of ice accumulations with climate. and ice-sheet modelling, and paleoclimatology paleoclimatology or palaeoclimatology Scientific study of the extended climatic conditions of past geologic ages. Paleoclimatologists seek to explain climate variations for all parts of the Earth during any given geologic period, beginning with the time of . The group meets biannually to discuss advances in knowledge of the dynamics in paleo-glacier ice cover throughout Atlantic Canada and related oceanographic, biologic, and climatic effects. For the past four years, the group has been charged with compiling and interpreting regional databases from geological surveys, producing glaciologically consistent conceptual models that are compatible with the history of eastern Canada ice dynamics. By using numerical simulations to evaluate the plausibility of these conceptual models, the group hopes to solve specific questions related to i) the nature and sources of late Pleistocene and Holocene meltwater melt·wa·ter n. Water that comes from melting snow or ice. meltwater Noun melted snow or ice Noun 1. pulses and marine sediments, and ii) the influence of polythermal ice-base conditions on till production and transportation. The two-day ACID-3 workshop was attended by 21 participants (Table 1) held at Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia For other uses, see Halifax. Halifax, Nova Scotia may refer to any of the following:
WORKSHOP OBJECTIVES As in the past, the workshop used informal presentations, posters, mini courses, and open debate and discussion to achieve its established goals. The ACID-3 workshop had three objectives: 1) to describe advances in Atlantic Canada Ice Dynamics research since the first ACID meeting (Gosse, 2002), 2) to consider the Nunatak Nu´na`tak n. 1. In Greenland, an insular hill or mountain surrounded by an ice sheet. Hypothesis and evidence for biological refugia In the most basic biological sense refugia (singular: refugium) are locations of isolated or relict populations of once widespread animal or plant species. This isolation (allopatry) can be due to climatic changes or human activities such as deforestation and over-hunting. , posited for disjunct dis·junct adj. 1. Characterized by separation. 2. Music Relating to progression by intervals larger than major seconds. 3. flora and fauna throughout Atlantic Canada, and 3) to evaluate output from the latest version of the University of Marne Ice Sheet Model (UMISM) and test its plausibility against conceptual models of Atlantic Canada ice dynamics. Presenters included: i) S. Carr, genomics researcher from Memorial University, who provided a mini-course in the acquisition and phylogeographic interpretation of mitochondrial mitochondrial pertaining to mitochondria. mitochondrial RNAs a unique set of tRNAs, mRNAs, rRNAs, transcribed from mitochondrial DNA by a mitochondrial-specific RNA polymerase, that account for about 4% of the total cell RNA that (mt)-DNA records from plants and animals Plants and Animals are a Canadian indie-rock band from Montreal, comprised of guitarist-vocalists Warren Spicer and Nic Basque, and drummer-vocalist Matthew Woodley.[1] They are signed to Secret City Records. , ii) D. Ruzzante, geneticist from Dalhousie University, who provided additional commentary, iii) J. Fastook, University of Maine "UMO" redirects here, but this abbreviation is also used informally to mean the Mozilla Add-ons website, formerly Mozilla Update Should not be confused with Université du Maine, in Le Mans, France The University of Maine , who provided an overview of the laws, rules, parameters, and other elements of the UMISM code and described the limitations and utilities of ice-sheet modelling, and iv) L. Tarasov, Memorial University, who provided additional commentary by comparing the results from the UMISM to his ice-sheet model. PROGRESS IN ACID RESEARCH Advances since ACID-1 Significant developments in understanding the paleo-glacier ice dynamics of Atlantic Canada have been achieved over the past four years from the study of both land and marine records. Compilation of ice dynamics data from onshore and offshore records, including ice-flow directions, relative and absolute chronology, positions of marginal moraines, and other glacial landforms that indicate streaming provide important insights into ice volumes and ice dynamics in Atlantic Canada. The value of data compilations is illustrated in the recent publication of a conceptual model of the deglacial history of southern Atlantic Canada (Shaw et al. 2006; Fig. 1), aspects of which have already been supported by simulations using a thermo-mechanical glaciologicai model (cf. Fig. 2). [FIGURES 1-2 OMITTED] Terrestrial cosmogenic cos·mo·gen·ic adj. Produced by cosmic rays. [cosm(ic ray) + -genic.] Adj. 1. nuclide nuclide or nuclear species Species of atom as characterized by the number of protons, neutrons, and the energy state of the nucleus. A nuclide is characterized by its mass number and its atomic number. (TCN) dating has enabled us to make profound advances regarding the nature and timing of deglaciation de·gla·ci·a·tion n. The uncovering of glaciated land because of melting or sublimation of the glacier. deglaciation The uncovering of land that was previously covered by a glacier. and the extent of ice cover in Atlantic Canada. Firmer constraints on the timing of deglaciation have been attained from TCN exposure dating of large (>2 m high) boulders from five regions that extend from southern Nova Scotia to the Cape Breton Highlands For other uses, see Cape Breton. The Cape Breton Highlands, commonly called the Highlands, refer to a 'highland' or 'plateau' of ancient rock across northern Cape Breton Island, Canada, and is an extension of the Appalachian mountain chain. . The results support previous work by Stea and others, which showed that ice persisted through the Younger Dryas (YD) chron in the highlands of southern and central Nova Scotia. The data also refute the hypothesis of no ice cover (Nunatak Hypothesis) on the Cape Breton highlands. Spooner reported that in the Trout Pond Gulch region of western Newfoundland, cosmogenic [sup.36]Cl ages from boulders have documented an early & glaciation (by about 22 ka) followed by a transition to alpine glaciation and rock glacierization until about 12 ka (J. Osborn and others, unpublished data, 2007). Gosse reported 15 new TCN ages from boulders in Newfoundland, revealing that i) deglaciation along the south coast commenced after 14.0 ka, ii) that most highland areas in central, southern, and western Newfoundland were deglaciated within a 2 ka period following this, indicating a collapse of the Newfoundland ice sheet (with the exception of Big Level, a coastal highland in Gros Morne National Park Gros Morne National Park National park, Newfoundland, Canada. Covering 458,000 acres (185,500 hectares) and established as a national park in 1973, it includes mountains of the Long Range and takes its name from Gros Morne Peak, which rises to 2,644 ft (806 m). which, in part, was deglaciated around 20 ka), and iii) that the Nunatak Hypothesis failed in all summit areas sampled (including two 'type localities' for the Nunatak Hypothesis--Big Level and St. John's Highlands that were deglaciated 20.2 [+ or -] 1.2 and 13.5 [+ or -] 0.5 ka ago, respectively). Other TCN data from recently deglaciated areas showed that ice did not deeply erode the bedrock (< 1 m), which also supports the notion that cold-based, weakly erosive e·ro·sive adj. Causing erosion. ice cover could preserve weathered bedrock. Stea and Seaman both emphasized the need for research on pre-late Wisconsinan deposits that have been identified in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick (e.g. Godfrey-Smith et al. 2003). Knowing how these deposits correlate with the offshore stratigraphy may provide important constraints on Atlantic glacial conditions and isostasy isostasy (īsŏs`təsē): see continent. isostasy Theory describing the mass balance in the Earth's crust, which treats all large portions of the crust as though they were floating on a denser underlying layer, about 70 leading into the last glaciation. Important developments have arisen from offshore research. Brushett and Shaw reported on their groups' progress in a large GSC GSC gas-solid chromatography. program that, in part, will provide high resolution records from multi-beam bathymetry ba·thym·e·try n. The measurement of the depth of bodies of water. bath y·met , seismic imaging, and coring to help provide land-sea
correlations and interpretations of the ice dynamics in the Burin,
Placentia Bay, and southwestern Avalon regions of Newfoundland and its
adjacent shelf. Miller et al. and Piper et al. reported on developments
in defining the position and timing of sedimentary fluxes onto the
Atlantic shelf and slope, and their implications for paleoceanography in
the north Atlantic during Holocene meltwater events related to a
shrinking Laurentide Ice Sheet Laurentide Ice SheetPrincipal glacial cover of North America during the Pleistocene epoch (1.8 million–10,000 years ago). At its maximum extent it spread as far south as latitude 37° N and covered an area of more than 5 million sq mi (13 million sq km). . For the first time, mapping of the nearshore coastal fringe--an area not included in either deepwater or land-based surveys--was described by Todd (starting with the Bay of Fundy Noun 1. Bay of Fundy - a bay of the North Atlantic between New Brunswick and Nova Scotia; noted for rapid tides as great as 70 feet Atlantic, Atlantic Ocean - the 2nd largest ocean; separates North and South America on the west from Europe and Africa on the east ). Webster described the application of new LiDAR instrumentation, now available at the Centre of Geographic Sciences The Centre of Geographic Sciences (COGS) is located in the village of Lawrencetown, Nova Scotia. COGS traces its history to 1948 when the Nova Scotia Land Survey Institute (NSLSI) was established by Major J.A.H. in Nova Scotia, to nearshore coastal mapping (e.g. Webster et al. 2006). Consideration of Biological Refugia and the Nunatak Hypothesis For over a century a debate has persisted over the hypothesis that summits of coastal highlands exhibiting altitudinally separable zones of weathering were not ice covered in the last or penultimate glaciation. The difficulties in testing this hypothesis relate to i) accessibility of such areas in Baffin Island and northern Labrador, ii) the lack of glacial erosion or deposits in these areas, and iii) the lack of radiocarbon media that could be dated in areas that are above the treeline. In searching for an explanation for apparent disjunct distributions of some species (beetles, bryophytes, spiders) in Canada, Greenland, and Europe, many biologists proposed a model of ice free enclaves to provide refugia during glaciation. The ACID-3 workgroup invited S. Cart to provide an overview of evidence for biological refugia from the organismal and mt-DNA perspective using records that have been attained throughout Atlantic Canada. Carr used the history of human expansion from Africa to exemplify the utility of the mt-DNA approach in dating the times of species expansion and diversification. He reviewed the latest mt-DNA data available for Newfoundland cod and caribou and concluded that the distributions are not consistent with any simple model of refugia or deglaciation. D. Ruzzante and others carried the discussion with examples from other species. Alternative explanations (i.e. in addition to the ice-free nunataks) for the phylogeographic relationships in Atlantic Canada include i) the species claimed to be disjunct from relatives in British Columbia or other continents may not be so related and require DNA analysis to demonstrate species-level relationships, ii) species found in coastal highland summits may live there because of narrow ecological tolerances, iii) alternatively, the refugia may be explained by a few local ice-free cliffs (between summit ice caps and valley glaciers) or by sea transgression-related isolation during deglaciation. More biological data are required before conclusions regarding the nature and timing of speciation speciation Formation of new and distinct species, whereby a single evolutionary line splits into two or more genetically independent ones. One of the fundamental processes of evolution, speciation may occur in many ways. in Atlantic Canada can be made, and the point was made that DNA-based phylogeographic analysis is significantly sensitive to the number of measurements made. In 1993, TCN measurements provided insight into the glacial history of potential nunataks in Newfoundland (see Gosse et al. 2006, for a summary). Since then, more than 200 samples from summits have been measured for cosmogenic [sup.10]Be or [sup.26]Al/[sup.10]Be ratios in Atlantic Canada and Baffin Island. Most of the summit and sub-summit erratics in northern Labrador span an age of 13-11 ka and are consistent with the YD chron (Marquette et al. 2004). In Labrador and Baffin Island, a similar situation to Newfoundland was unveiled by [sup.26]Al/[sup.10]Be dating of bedrock surfaces (mostly on tor-like outcrops), which consistently reveal that the summit surfaces were buried (cosmic ray flux was interrupted) for durations of [10.sup.5] to [10.sup.6] years (Staiger et al. 2005, 2006). In north central Baffin Island, burial histories of at least 3 Ma are recorded by regolith reg·o·lith n. The layer of loose rock resting on bedrock, constituting the surface of most land. Also called mantle rock. [Greek rh and till, which only recently have been deglaciated (Staiger et al. 2006). The new TCN data and other geological evidence suggest that postulated nunatak summits, which are indeed more weathered, survived under ice that was mostly cold-based and non-erosive i.e. the summits were glaciated gla·ci·ate tr.v. gla·ci·at·ed, gla·ci·at·ing, gla·ci·ates 1. a. To cover with ice or a glacier. b. To subject to or affect by glacial action. 2. To freeze. . In summary, isotopic and geochronological data and land-based ice volume constraints refute the Nunatak Hypothesis (ice-free enclaves along coastal summit highlands). This applies to all localities known for weathering zones and biological refugia in western Newfoundland and northern Labrador, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick. However, the possibility of cliff-based refugia has not been precluded. Evaluate UMISM Simulations for Atlantic Canada The last objective of the workshop was to evaluate high-resolution simulations from a thermo-mechanical ice-sheet model that was developed by J. Fastook. The simulations were made available to the workgroup for evaluation in the form of downloadable movies. Fastook reviewed details of the model design and reported results from three approaches for simulating ice cover in Atlantic Canada over the past 20 ka. In all three, Newfoundland retained an ice cap separate from the Laurentian Ice Sheet due to a significant draw down of ice via streaming and calving calving act of parturition in a bovine female, and presumably in any animal that bears a calf as its newborn. See also block calving, ease of calving. calving-to-conception interval through the St. Lawrence--Laurentian Channel. Several first-order features of the numerical simulations were supported by field evidence and the most recent conceptual model of deglaciation (Shaw et al. 2006). These features include i) the general position of ridges, divides, and domes in Newfoundland (compare Figs. 1 and 2) and New Brunswick, ii) the style of deglaciation of Newfoundland, with the Avalon Peninsula first, followed by a sudden collapse of central Newfoundland, iii) early deglaciation of summits, followed by delayed deglaciation in areas that had thicker ice, and (iv) cold-based ice in areas of thin ice or under ice divides, wet-based more erosive ice under areas of rapid flow or thicker ice. The model failed to produce a glacial history that even remotely resembles the conceptual model and field evidence for Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island Prince Edward Island, province (2001 pop. 135,294), 2,184 sq mi (5,657 sq km), E Canada, off N.B. and N.S. Geography One of the Maritime Provinces, Prince Edward Island lies in the Gulf of St. , and parts of New Brunswick (e.g. Stea and Mott 2005; Shaw 2006). Furthermore, the simulations predict that deglaciation occurred slightly earlier than suggested by available chronologies for the Atlantic region. Considering the close agreement with other aspects of Atlantic Canada deglaciation, the shortcomings were attributed to the lack of a reliable palaeoclimate signal for the past 100 ka (climate data on land exists only for post-glacial times, and offshore there are no continuous records of air temperature or precipitation). Tarasov described alternative approaches for modelling the glacial dynamics of the region, and the workgroup discussed some of the questions that can now be asked of the models, such as using the model output to fill gaps between well-dated relative sea-level records (e.g. Bell et al. 2003) or interpolation interpolation In mathematics, estimation of a value between two known data points. A simple example is calculating the mean (see mean, median, and mode) of two population counts made 10 years apart to estimate the population in the fifth year. among ages defining a sea-level curve. The existence of the proposed peripheral ice caps--independent from, but abutting against the Lauren-tide Ice Sheet--requires drawdown via an ice stream through the Gulf of St. Lawrence Noun 1. Gulf of St. Lawrence - an arm of the northwest Atlantic Ocean off the southeastern coast of Canada Gulf of Saint Lawrence Atlantic, Atlantic Ocean - the 2nd largest ocean; separates North and South America on the west from Europe and Africa on the east and Laurentian Channel with velocities of magnitudes similar to modern Antarctic ice streams. Evidence for these ice streams has already been identified throughout Atlantic Canada. The UMISM simulations predict ice domes, divides, and ridges in Newfoundland and parts of the Maritimes, which were conceptualized from the field data. However, ice-sheet simulations fail to support many observations from Nova Scotia and the Scotian Shelf, and yield deglacial chronologies and geometries of deglaciation that are inconsistent with the Nova Scotia geological record after 16 ka. A more robust regional climate model and more sophisticated calving and basal shear rules are required for simulations of second-order questions and any interpolations between field localities where geological observations are sparse. FUTURE ACID RESEARCH AND WORKSHOPS The workshop ended with a discussion of 15 key scientific questions that the group should address over the next two to four years. Considerable discussion regarded the evaluation of glacial erosion in a region covered by polythermal ice, and the subsequent sediment flux to the ocean (an extension of the international "source-to-sink" research but with an emphasis on the role of glacial dynamics). The results will likely have an impact on geodynamical studies of active orogens that have been glaciated, and can provide insights into the magnitude and fluctuation of sediment loading on the continental margin (e.g. Skene skene In ancient Greek theatre, a building behind the playing area that was originally a hut in which actors changed masks and costumes. It eventually became the scenic backdrop for the drama. First used c. and Piper 2006) and their effect on salt deformation in petroleum source basins. CORPORATE MEMBERS PATRONS Memorial University of Newfoundland Memorial University of Newfoundland, at St. John's, N.L., Canada; provincially supported; coeducational; founded 1925 as Memorial Univ. College. It achieved university status in 1949. Ministere des Ressources naturelles et de la Faune Northwest Territories Geoscience Office Yukon Dept. of Energy Mines & Resources SPONSORS Geological Survey of Canada (Calgary) Husky Energy Royal Tyrrell Museum Saskatchewan Industry & Resources Virginia Mines Inc. SUPPORTERS Geoscience BC Pele Mountain Resources Inc. Silver Spruce Resources Inc. Universal Uranium Ltd. UNIVERSITIES Acadia University McGill University Universite du Quebec A Montreal University of Calgary Utah State University Utah State University, mainly at Logan; coeducational; land-grant and state supported; chartered 1888, opened 1890. It publishes Utah Science, Western Historical Quarterly, and Western American Literary Journal. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The ACID Workgroup thanks the Atlantic Geoscience Society (AGS AGS American Geriatrics Society. ), Canadian Geomorphological Research Group (CGRG CGRG Canadian Geomorphology Research Group (University of Victoria) ), and ACOA (Atlantic Innovation Fund The Atlantic Innovation Fund (AIF) is a financing program run by the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency (ACOA) to help Canadian organizations in Atlantic Canada to develop innovative products and services. This program is highly-competitive. #1001052) for support of the ACID-3 workshop. Submitted, 23 March 2007; accepted as revised, 20 April 2007 REFERENCES Bell, T., Batterson, M.J., Liverman, D.G.E., and Shaw, J., 2003, A new late-glacial sea-level record for St. George's Bay This article is about the St. George's Bay in Canada; for the bay in Beirut, Lebanon, see Saint George Bay. St. George's Bay is a large bay on the west coast of the island of Newfoundland comprising a sub-basin of the Gulf of St. Lawrence. , Newfoundland: Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, v. 40, p. 1053-1070. Godfrey-Smith, D.I., Grist, A.M., and Stea, R.R., 2003, Dosimetric and radiocarbon chronology of a pre-Wisconsinan mastodon mastodon (măs`tədŏn'), name for a number of prehistoric mammals of the extinct genus Mammut, from which modern elephants are believed to have developed. The earliest known forms lived in the Oligocene epoch in Africa. fossil locality at East Milford, Nova Scotia, Canada: Quaternary Science Reviews, v. 22, p. 1353-1360. Gosse, J., 2002, Atlantic Canada glacier ice dynamics workshop: Geoscience Canada, v. 29, p. 183-186. Gosse, J.C., Bell, T., Gray, J., Klein, J., Yang, G., and Finkel, R., 2006, Using cosmogenic isotopes to interpret the landscape record of glaciation: Nunataks in Newfoundland: in, Knight, P., ed., Glaciers and Earth's Changing Environment: Blackwell Publishers, p. 442-446. Marquette, G. C., Gray, J. T., Gosse, J. C., Courchesne, F., Stockli, L., Macpherson, G., and Finkel, R., 2004, Felsenmeer persistence through glacial periods in the Torngat and Kaumajet Mountains, Quebec-Labrador, as determined by soil weathering and cosmogenic nuclide exposure dating: Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, v. 41, p. 19-38. Shaw, J., 2006, Palaeogeography of Atlantic Canadian continental shelves from the last glacial maximum The Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) refers to the time of maximum extent of the ice sheets during the last glaciation (the Würm or Wisconsin glaciation), approximately 20,000 years ago. This extreme persisted for several thousand years. to the present, with an emphasis on Flemish Cap. Journal of Northwest Atlantic Fishery Science, v. 37 (Flemish Cap Symposium, 2004). Online at: [http://journal.nafo.int/37/shaw/10-shaw.html] Shaw, J., Piper, D.J.W., Fader Fa´der n. 1. Father. , G., King, E.L., Todd, B.J., Bell, T., Batterson, M.J., and Liverman, D.G.E., 2006, A conceptual model of the deglaciation of Atlantic Canada: Quaternary Science Reviews, v. 25, nos. 17/18. p. 2059-2081. Skene, K.I. and Piper, D.J.W., 2006, Late Cenozoic evolution of Laurentian Fan: development of a glacially-fed submarine fan: Marine Geology, v. 227, p. 67-92. Staiger, J. W., Gosse, J. C., Johnson, J., Fastook, J., Gray, J. T., Stockli, D., Stockli, L., and Finkel, R., 2005, Quaternary relief generation by polythermal glacier ice: a field calibrated glacial erosion model: Earth Surface Processes and Landforms Earth Surface Processes and Landforms is the journal of the British Society for Geomorphology (BSG) , formerly the British Geomorphological Research Group (BGRG). The BSG promotes the field of geomorphology, encouraging interests in: earth surface processes, and the erosion, , v. 30, p. 1145-1159. Staiger, J., Gosse, J., Little, E., Utting, D., Finkel, R., Johnson, J., and Fastook, J., 2006, Glacial erosion and sediment dispersion from detrital cosmogenic nuclide analyses of till: Quaternary Geochronology, v. 1, no. 1, p. 29-42. Stea, R.R., and Mort, R.J., 2005, Younger Dryas glacial advance in the southern Gulf of Lawrence, Canada; analogue for ice inception?: Boreas, v. 34, p. 345-362. Webster, T.J., Murphy, B., Gosse, J., and Spooner, I., 2006, Coupling LiDAR-derived landscape metrics and surface processes: An example from the Fundy Basin, Nova Scotia, Canada: Canadian Journal of Remote Sensing, v. 32, p. 173-193. ACID Workgroup Department of Earth Sciences, 3006 LSC, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, B3H 3J5 Canada E-mail: john.gosse@dal.ca Table 1. Participants of ACID-3 Workshop Allen Seaman Ann Miller Anne Reuther Brian Todd Bruce Broster Daniel Ruzzante David Liverman David Piper Denise Brushett Gordon Cameron Gordon Fader Ian Spooner Jim Fastook John Gosse John Shaw Lev Tarasov Ned King Ralph Stea Steven Carr Tim Webster Trevor Bell |
|
||||||||||||||

y·met
Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion