Introduction
In a recent paper (Reference MörnerMörner, 1974), I put forward the theory that the European and North American ice sheets of the Last Ice Age were continuously displaced southward during the three main glaciation maxima and that this may explain the shape of l8O curves obtained from deep-sea cores (e.g. Reference EmilianiEmiliani, 1966).
Reference Broecker and Donk vanBroecker and van Donk (1970) suggested that the saw-tooth pattern of the 18O curves reflect “gradual glacial buildups”. However, all glacial records clearly indicate that this is not the case but that the Last Ice Age is characterized by three major glaciation maxima of roughly the same size (Mörner, Reference Mörner1971, 1972[a], [b]) though-as suggested by the author in the above-mentioned paper (Reference MörnerMörner, 1974)—with a continuously southward displacement of the glacial distribution the centre and margins).
Discussion
Numerous studies (e.g. Reference GrossGross, 1967; Reference MörnerMörner, 1970, 1972[b], 1973; Reference Dreimanis and HarrowDreimanis and Karrow, 1972; Reference MörnerMörner and Dreimanis, 1973; Reference Dreimanis and RaukasDreimanis and Raukas, 1975) have documented that not only do the major stadial/interstadial changes, but also the second-order stadial/interstadial changes during the late Wisconsin-Weichselian, show a remarkable correlation on a regional basis along the margins of the ice sheets as well as on an inter-regional basis between the European and North American ice sheets. However, almost all of the data referring to the Laurentide-Cordilleran and the Fennoscandian ice sheets come from the southern, southeastern and south-western margins of these ice sheets. The records from the northern margins and the north-south correlations were forgotten. Thanks to the studies by the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research in Boulder, Colorado, a fairly detailed stratigraphy and chronology have been established for the Baffin Island region. Because the outermost glaciation limit during the late Wisconsin was found to have been formed at about 8 000 B. P. in Baffin Island, because the margin of error in the dating for the older periods was large and because the first glaciation maximum was the largest, the second was the second largest and the third (at 8 000 B.P.) was the smallest, Reference Pheasant and AndrewsPheasant and Andrews (1972, 1973) and Reference Andrews, Andrews, Barry, Bradley, Miller and WilliamsAndrews and others (1972) arrived at the conclusion that the ice-marginal fluctuations at the northern and southern margins of the Laurentide ice cap were out of phase.
However, this north-south out-of-phase theory is disbelieved by the present author for the following reasons:
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(1) Both first- and second-order stadial/interstadial changes, as reflected in glacial, climatic and eustatic fluctuations, show such a remarkable global correlation (Monier, 1970, 1971, 1972[b], 1973) that they must be closely controlled by global climatic changes, which also would have affected the Arctic region.
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(2) The major eustatic changes during the last 130 000 years (Reference Steinen, Steinen, Harrison and MatthewsSteinen and others, 1973; Reference ChappellChappell, 1974) show major regressions and transgressions consistent with synchronous glacial changes.
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(3) The smaller Fennoscandian ice sheet shows synchronous ice-marginal fluctuations all around the ice cap, but with the centre and margins continuously displaced south-westward {Reference MörnerMörner, 1974, 1976).
It is therefore suggested that the Laurentide ice sheets underwent synchronous glacial volume changes, with the centre and margins continuously displaced southward and westward.
This gives the following south-north correlations: Sangamon interglacial = Flitaway interglacial, Pre-St. Pierre or Nicolet stadial (smallest) = Alikdjuak stadial (largest), St. Pierre interstadial = Quajon interstadial, early Wisconsin or Guildwood stadial = Nonasiak-Napiat stadial, mid-Wisconsin interstadial complex = Nonasiak/Kreager interval, late Wisconsin stadial (largest) = Kreager stadial with Cockburn maximum (smallest). Besides the southward displacement, there was a similar westward displacement.
The corresponding south-north correlations of the Fennoscandian ice sheet are as follows (Reference MörnerMörner, 1974, fig. 2, 1976): Eemian interglacial = Mikulinskiy interglacial, Pre-Brörup stadial (smallest) = first glaciation maximum (largest), Brörup-Pilgrimstad interstadial = Mologo-Shenska-Karuküla interstadial with a boreal transgression at the Kola Peninsula, early Weichselian or Anholt stadial = early Valday or Leningradskiy stadial, mid-Weichselian interstadial complex (Glumslöv interstadial) = Grazhdanskiy Prospekt interstadial with an Arctic, to Arctic-boreal transgression at the Kola Peninsula, late Weichselian or Brandenburg stadial (largest) = late Valday (smallest).
Figure 1 gives a graph of the glacial volume changes of the Laurent ide and Fennoscandian ice sheets during the Last Ice Age, including the regional north-south correlations and (he inter-regional (trans-Atlantic) correlations. There are three major glaciation maxima (I—III). These maxima had roughly the same volume, though the distribution was different: migrating from north to south with time. Prior to 50 000 B.P. the time-scale is so uncertain that no dates have been applied to the graph in Figure 1.
Certainly, many details remain to be determined before a final picture is established of the glacial volume changes and area! distribution changes of the Laurentide and Fennoscandian ice sheets during the Last Ice Age. However, Figure 1 is believed to show the fundamental chronological correlations and extensional differences between the fluctuations along the northern and southern margins of the two continental ice sheets of the Last Ice Age. The corresponding geographical distribution of the Fennoscandian ice sheet has been given in a separate paper (Reference MörnerMörner, 1974, fig. 2).
Conclusions
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The Laurentide and Fennoscandian ice sheets had three major maxima during the Last Ice Age. These maxima were of roughly the same size (disregarding the theory of “gradual glacial build-ups"). The distribution of these maxima was continuously displaced southward (south-westward in northern Europe and southward and westward in North America). This glacial migration explains the saw-tooth pattern of l8O curves from deep-sea cores.
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As the 18O records of the previous ice ages possess a similar saw-tooth pattern, it is likely that the southward migration of the glacial distribution is typical for an ice age, i.e. the accumulation starts in high latitudes and gives rise to an initial glacial phase centred far to the north, this is displaced southward during the subsequent stadial/interstadial changes, and finally reaches so far south that the subsequent warming causes a rapid end to the whole ice age (the “termination” by Reference Broecker and Donk vanBroecker and van Donk (1970)).
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The ice-marginal fluctuations along the southern and northern margins of the Laurentide and Fennoscandian ice sheets were in phase (though of reversed order of magnitude). This is consistent with a global climatic control of the major stadial/interstadial changes as well as of the minor fluctuations. It is also consistent with the recorded glacial eustatic changes. (Furthermore, it seems to rule out the criticism by Reference Andrews, Andrews, Funder, Hjort and ImbrieAndrews and others (1974) for using south-margin data instead of north-margin data to interpret the Greenland l8O curve.)
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Much work remains to sharpen the details of the ice-marginal fluctuations around the ice sheets and of the corresponding geographical distribution of the ice sheets. Still, the north-south synchroncity and the southward migration of the ice sheets seem to be fundamental for the Last Ice Age, and possibly also for the previous ice ages.