Quantitative sub-ice and marine tracing of Antarctic sediment provenance (TASP v1.0)
Ice sheet models should be able to accurately simulate palaeo ice sheets to have confidence in their projections
of future polar ice sheet mass loss and resulting global sea
level rise. This requires accurate reconstructions of the extent and flow patterns of palaeo ice sheets using real-world
data. Such reconstructions can be achieved by tracing the
detrital components of offshore sedimentary records back to
their source areas on land. For Antarctica, however, sediment
provenance data and ice sheet model results have not been
directly linked, despite the complementary information each
can provide on the other. Here, we present a computational
framework (Tracing Antarctic Sediment Provenance, TASP)
that predicts marine geochemical sediment provenance data
using the output of numerical ice sheet modelling. The ice
sheet model is used to estimate the spatial pattern of erosion potential and to trace ice flow pathways. Beyond the
ice sheet margin, approximations of modern detrital particle
transport mechanisms using ocean reanalysis data produce a
good agreement between our predictions for the modern ice
sheet–ocean system and seabed surface sediments. These results show that the algorithm could be used to predict the
provenance signature of past ice sheet configurations. TASP
currently predicts neodymium isotope compositions using
the PSUICE3D ice sheet model, but thanks to its design it
could be adapted to predict other provenance indicators or
use the outputs of other ice sheet models.
Details
Publication status:
Published
Author(s):
Authors: Marschalek, James W. ORCID record for James W. Marschalek, Gasson, Edward, van de Flierdt, Tina ORCID record for Tina van de Flierdt, Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter, Siegert, Martin J. ORCID record for Martin J. Siegert, Holder, Liam