1. INTRODUCTION
The drainage of continental ice sheets is organised into a series of tributaries that feed rapidly-flowing outlet glaciers known as ice streams (Bamber and others, Reference Bamber, Vaughan and Joughin2000). Due to their rapid flow, ice streams account for 50–90% of ice discharge from modern ice sheets and recent observations of their thinning and acceleration indicate that their contribution to sea level rise has increased over the past few decades (Pritchard and others, Reference Pritchard, Arthern, Vaughan and Edwards2009; Moon and others, Reference Moon, Joughin, Smith and Howat2012). The mechanisms driving these changes are likely to involve both atmospheric and oceanic warming, but evolving conditions on the beds of ice streams also play a crucial role in modulating their behaviour (e.g. Engelhardt and Kamb, Reference Engelhardt and Kamb1997; Anandakrishnan and others, Reference Anandakrishnan, Blankenship, Alley and Stoffa1998). These bed conditions include characteristics such as topography, geothermal and frictional heat, subglacial water and sedimentary/geomorphological processes; all of which evolve through time to enhance or inhibit rapid ice stream flow (Alley and others, Reference Alley, Blankenship, Bentley and Rooney1986; Tulaczyk and others, Reference Tulaczyk, Kamb and Engelhardt2000a, Reference Tulaczyk, Kamb and Engelhardtb; Parizek and others, Reference Parizek, Alley, Anandakrishnan and Conway2002; Schoof, Reference Schoof2002; Stokes and others, Reference Stokes, Clark, Lian and Tulaczyk2007). Direct access to, and observations of the subglacial environment of present day ice streams in Greenland and Antarctica are challenging. Technological advances have permitted pioneering borehole (e.g. Engelhardt and Kamb, Reference Engelhardt and Kamb1997) and geophysical investigations (e.g. Smith and others, Reference Smith2007; King and others, Reference King, Hindmarsh and Stokes2009), but boreholes are restricted to relatively small spatial and temporal ‘windows’ of the ice stream bed. An alternative approach is to seek out locations where ice streams formerly operated and use the well-preserved bed imprint to investigate subglacial processes, i.e. in positions distal to modern ice stream termini (e.g. Jakobsson and others, Reference Jakobsson2012) or from the beds of palaeo-ice sheets (e.g. Stokes and Clark, Reference Stokes and Clark2001). However, relatively few studies have undertaken comprehensive mapping and detailed quantitative/statistical analysis of palaeo-ice stream beds (e.g. Dowdeswell and others, Reference Dowdeswell, Cofaigh and Pudsey2004a; Livingstone and others, Reference Livingstone2013; Stokes and others, Reference Stokes2013; Spagnolo and others, Reference Spagnolo2014; Klages and others, Reference Klages2015), which are required to fully characterise their basal environment over large spatial scales.
Using a recent map presented by Livingstone and others (Reference Livingstone2013), our aim is to analyse the spatial pattern and morphometry of ice stream bedforms and their relation to till properties and thickness on the former Marguerite Bay ice stream (MBIS), western Antarctic Peninsula, to understand ice stream retreat patterns, sedimentary processes and bedform genesis. The results are presented in two papers: in the first paper we analyse ~17 000 individual landforms (Livingstone and others, Reference Livingstone2013) and explore the implications with respect to sediment transport and the formation of subglacial bedforms along the MBIS trough. In the second paper (Jamieson and others, Reference Jamieson2016) we integrate these data with a two-dimensional (2-D) numerical flow-line model to make a preliminary exploration of the links between the observed geomorphology and modelled ice stream dynamics.
2. STUDY AREA AND PREVIOUS WORK
On the west side of the Antarctic Peninsula a 50–80 km wide bathymetric trough (Marguerite Trough) extends from inner Marguerite Bay at the mouth of George VI Sound for ~370 km to the continental shelf edge (Fig. 1). Water depths in the trough shallow from 1600 m on the inner shelf to 500 m at the shelf edge, whereas on the adjoining banks they range from 400 to 500 m (Fig. 1). Seismic data reveal that the substrate of Marguerite Trough changes from sedimentary strata on the outer shelf to indurated sedimentary bedrock and crystalline basement on the middle and inner shelf (Bart and Anderson, Reference Bart and Anderson1995; Larter and others, Reference Larter, Rebesco, Vanneste, Gamboa and Barker1997; Fig. 5.20 in Anderson, Reference Anderson1999). Presently, the George VI Ice Shelf covers parts of the inner bay in George VI Sound (Fig. 1).
There have been several marine geophysical and geological studies of the glacial geomorphology and geology of Marguerite Bay and Marguerite Trough (e.g. Kennedy and Anderson, Reference Kennedy and Anderson1989; Pope and Anderson, Reference Pope and Anderson1992; Ó Cofaigh and others, Reference Ó Cofaigh, Pudsey, Dowdeswell and Morris2002, Reference Ó Cofaigh2005, Reference Ó Cofaigh, Evans, Dowdeswell and Larter2007, Reference Ó Cofaigh, Dowdeswell, Evans and Larter2008; Dowdeswell and others, Reference Dowdeswell, Cofaigh and Pudsey2004a, Reference Dowdeswell, Cofaigh and Pudseyb; Heroy and Anderson, Reference Heroy and Anderson2005; Anderson and Oakes-Fretwell, Reference Anderson and Oakes-Fretwell2008; Livingstone and others, Reference Livingstone2013). Using swath bathymetric records of the sea floor morphology along the trough, Ó Cofaigh and others (Reference Ó Cofaigh, Pudsey, Dowdeswell and Morris2002) showed an along-flow progression in bedform evolution with ice-moulded bedrock, drumlins and subglacial meltwater channels formed predominantly in bedrock in the inner bay, which transition to classical drumlins, highly attenuated drumlins and glacial lineations on the mid-shelf, and then to mega-scale glacial lineations (MSGLs) up to 20 km in length and formed in sediments across the outer shelf. Thus, bedforms are present over both the crystalline substrate of the inner and mid-shelf, and the sedimentary substrate of the outer shelf. The subglacial bedforms have a consistent orientation, showing ice flow along the trough, and were interpreted to record former streaming flow draining through Marguerite Trough to the shelf edge during the last glaciation (Ó Cofaigh and others, Reference Ó Cofaigh, Pudsey, Dowdeswell and Morris2002).
Topographic Parametric Sonar (TOPAS) acoustic sub-bottom profiler and reflection seismic data from along the trough show a rough and irregular sea floor in the inner to mid-shelf parts of the trough, which reflects the crystalline bedrock substrate (Bart and Anderson, Reference Bart and Anderson1995; Ó Cofaigh and others, Reference Ó Cofaigh2005). However, on the outer shelf, the TOPAS records show that the MSGLs are formed in the upper part of an acoustically transparent sediment unit which sits over a strong basal reflector (Dowdeswell and others, Reference Dowdeswell, Cofaigh and Pudsey2004a; Ó Cofaigh and others, Reference Ó Cofaigh2005). This acoustic facies is thickest along the centre of the trough, but was not found on the adjoining banks. Cores from this acoustic facies show that it comprises a soft (shear strengths of 0–20 kPa), porous (35–45%), massive, matrix-supported diamicton interpreted as a subglacial till (Dowdeswell and others, Reference Dowdeswell, Cofaigh and Pudsey2004a; Ó Cofaigh and others, Reference Ó Cofaigh2005). Detailed analysis of the soft till showed that it is a ‘hybrid’ formed by a combination of subglacial sediment deformation and lodgement with individual shear zones of 0.1–0.9 m in thickness (Ó Cofaigh and others, Reference Ó Cofaigh, Evans, Dowdeswell and Larter2007, Reference Ó Cofaigh2014).
The retreat history of the MBIS is constrained by radiocarbon dates from marine sediment cores (Fig. 1; Harden and others, Reference Harden, DeMaster and Nittrouer1992; Pope and Anderson, Reference Pope and Anderson1992; Ó Cofaigh and others, Reference Ó Cofaigh2005, Reference Ó Cofaigh2014; Heroy and Anderson, Reference Heroy and Anderson2007; Kilfeather and others, Reference Kilfeather2011). Compared with other Antarctic palaeo-ice streams, the radiocarbon chronology for the MBIS retreat is comparatively robust because the majority of marine dates were obtained from calcareous (micro-)fossils and down-core age reversals were not observed. Following the approach of Heroy and Anderson (Reference Heroy and Anderson2007) and using only the most reliable ages (see Fig. 1), the chronology suggests a non-linear pattern of ice stream retreat characterised by rapid deglaciation of 140 km of the outer shelf ~14 cal. ka BP, followed by a slower phase of retreat through the mid-shelf that was associated with the break-up of an ice shelf and, thereafter, rapid retreat to the inner shelf at ~9 cal. ka BP (Fig. 1) (Heroy and Anderson, Reference Heroy and Anderson2007; Kilfeather and others, Reference Kilfeather2011; Jamieson and others, Reference Jamieson2012). The mean grounding-line retreat rate of MBIS was ~80 m a−1, although during the two periods of rapid retreat across the outer-mid shelf, the rates of recession were much greater, occurring within the error range of the radiocarbon dates (Livingstone and others, Reference Livingstone2012).
3. DATA AND METHODS
3.1. Geophysical and geological data
Marine geophysical and geological data for this study were collected on cruises JR59, JR71 and JR157 of the RRS James Clark Ross (JCR) and NBP0201 of the RV/IB Nathaniel B. Palmer (NBP) (Fig. 1). Swath bathymetry data were obtained using Kongsberg EM120 (JCR) and hull-mounted SeaBeam 2100 (NBP) multibeam echo-sounders and gridded at ~15 m × 45 m in MB-System (Caress and Chayes, Reference Caress and Chayes2003). A geomorphological map of the Marguerite Bay palaeo-ice stream is published in Livingstone and others (Reference Livingstone2013) and these mapped features (Fig. 2) form the basis for the analysis presented here.
Shallow acoustic seismic data were obtained on JCR cruises JR59 and JR71 using a Kongsberg TOPAS sub-bottom profiler. Sediment thicknesses were calculated assuming a sound velocity of 1500 m s−1 (cf. Dowdeswell and others, Reference Dowdeswell, Cofaigh and Pudsey2004a). We derived thickness maps of soft till and postglacial sediments (including deglacial sediments) at 200 m horizontal resolution using an ordinary Kriging technique with a spherical semivariogram model. Where an acoustic sub-bottom reflector depicting the boundary between an upper soft and a lower stiff till layer was not observed, ‘no data’ values were assigned as this could indicate an absence of soft till or a layer of soft till that was so thick that the TOPAS profiler was unable to penetrate it fully (cf. Reinardy and others, Reference Reinardy, Hiemstra, Murray, Hillenbrand and Larter2011a). The age constraints used for calculating sediment fluxes are those highlighted in bold in Figure 1 (the figure caption provides references for radiocarbon dates).
3.2. MSGL measurements
In this paper, we follow the approach of Livingstone and others (Reference Livingstone2013) and use the term ‘mega-scale glacial lineations’ for all linear features that do not clearly initiate from or are not clearly composed of bedrock (e.g. crag and tails) (Fig. 2). As such, the MSGLs discussed here are likely to comprise a continuum of linear bedforms, including features on the outer shelf that fit the classical description of MSGLs (Clark, Reference Clark1993) and features on the middle and inner shelf that have more drumlinoid shapes and may be related to underlying bedrock, albeit not exposed at the surface (c.f. Ó Cofaigh and others, Reference Ó Cofaigh, Pudsey, Dowdeswell and Morris2002; Graham and others, Reference Graham2009). By grouping these bedforms as MSGLs we avoid the difficulty of attempting to distinguish between features that are likely to evolve from one type to another and without any obvious difference in morphometry. For the classification of all other mapped bedforms, the reader is referred to Livingstone and others (Reference Livingstone2013).
Using the dataset of mapped MSGLs (Fig. 2), we measured MSGL length, density, height and spacing. Length is measured along the crest line of each mapped MSGL. To investigate the downstream variation in MSGL length, values were assigned to the nearest 1 km interval along a central flow line (Jamieson and others, Reference Jamieson2016) and the mode, median, maximum, minimum and standard deviation (SD) were calculated.
Lineation (line) density was calculated (m km−2) by summing the length of the portion of each MSGL that falls within the 1 km search radius around each cell, and then dividing by the area of that circle. This method was chosen over the number of MSGLs per area because it accounts for the length of the MSGL, rather than just a single location (e.g. mid-point).
The MSGL heights and spacing were derived from cross-profile transects positioned at 1 km intervals along the length of Marguerite Trough, stretching from the inner shelf to the continental shelf edge (Fig. 1). Measurements were restricted to regions floored by sediment and with <2 m of postglacial sediments. MSGL heights were calculated by taking the mean difference between the ridge crest elevation and the minimum elevation of grooves separating the MSGL from its nearest neighbour. This method assumes that MSGLs form a continuous cross-profile waveform, which may be unrealistic, especially, further upstream where non-MSGL topography (e.g. inner shelf channels) probably results in inflated values. We therefore avoid the innermost part of the shelf and restrict our analysis to the outer ~350 km of the MBIS trough, thereby focusing on the median of all the measured height values along each transect (rather than the mode) in order to minimise the effect of inflated values. The same principles were applied to the calculation of MSGL spacing, defined as the across-stream ridge-to-ridge distance.
3.3. Grounding-zone wedge (GZW) geometry and timescales of formation
GZWs comprise wedges of diamicton characterised by a steep distal sea-floor ramp and shallow backslope, and are typically tens of kilometres long and tens of metres high (Alley and others, Reference Alley, Blankenship, Rooney and Bentley1989; Batchelor and Dowdeswell, Reference Batchelor and Dowdeswell2015). They are thought to form during periods of grounding-zone stability or minor re-advances (Alley and others, Reference Alley, Blankenship, Rooney and Bentley1989). Acoustic data collected through the GZWs were unable to penetrate to a basal reflector. The volumes of GZWs on the outer shelf were therefore estimated using the long profile of the GZW and, assuming a flat base (e.g. Jakobsson and others, Reference Jakobsson2012; Klages and others, Reference Klages2014), the mean thickness of the profile and the GZW width (Table 1). However, this may be a simplification because the volume of a given GZW can be partly ‘hidden’ below a GZW deposited later, further upstream (Bart and Owolana, Reference Bart and Owolana2012). The timescale of GZW formation was calculated from their volume and 3-D sediment flux using the equation
Calculated subglacial 2-D sediment fluxes from modelled, palaeo- and contemporary ice streams typically range between 100 and 1000 (m3 a−1 (m grounding line width)−1) (e.g. Alley and others, Reference Alley, Blankenship, Rooney and Bentley1989; Dowdeswell and others, Reference Dowdeswell, Cofaigh and Pudsey2004a), with fluxes as high as 8000 (m3 a−1 (m grounding line width)−1) estimated for the Norwegian Channel ice stream (Nygård and others, Reference Nygård2007). The three values quoted above were taken as end members and multiplied by the GZW widths to derive a range of realistic 3-D sediment flux across the grounding line.
Sediment fluxes were also calculated using the equation (modified from Hooke and Elverhøi, Reference Hooke and Elverhøi1996; Bougamont and Tulaczyk, Reference Bougamont and Tulaczyk2003),
where Qs = sediment flux (m3 a−1), k = constant to account for the decrease in deformation with depth, M d = component of motion attributable to deformation, S = effective thickness of the basal mobile layer (m), Us = streaming velocity (m a−1) and w = ice stream width (m).
4. BASAL CHARACTERISTICS OF MARGUERITE TROUGH PALAEO-ICE STREAM
4.1. Morphometry of GZWs
Livingstone and others (Reference Livingstone2013) identified 12 GZWs that occur along the length of the middle and outer shelf as localised features in the centre of the trough and on the trough flanks (Fig. 2). They have also been mapped beyond the main trough (GZWs 1–3) near the shelf edge, and are associated with the partial preservation of MSGLs in front of their scarps. Notably, all GZWs are observed in areas with a reverse bed-slope (which drops landward by ~120 m every 100 km on average), and seem to have formed when the rate of MBIS grounding line retreat slowed in areas where the width narrows (Jamieson and others, Reference Jamieson2012). Their shape and dimensions are the characteristics of seismically imaged GZWs observed elsewhere in Antarctica and Greenland (e.g. Dowdeswell and Fugelli, Reference Dowdeswell and Fugelli2012; Batchelor and Dowdeswell, Reference Batchelor and Dowdeswell2015).
4.2. Morphometry of MSGLs
Analysis of 5037 MSGLs within Marguerite Trough shows their lengths range between ~100 and 17 800 m, with a mode of 600–800 m, median of 918 m and SD of 1630 m (Fig. 3). The frequency histogram indicates a unimodal distribution with a skew towards shorter lengths and a long tail of relatively few long MSGLs. The mean and maximum length of MSGLs increases towards the shelf edge (Fig. 4), with the longest MSGLs concentrated along the central axis of the trough (Fig. 5a). Indeed, the longest (>10 km) MSGLs are clearly observed to cluster together (Fig. 5a; see also Section 4.4).
A noticeable jump in mean length (by ~1 km) occurs just downstream of the mid/outer shelf transition (at ~650 km along the palaeo-ice stream from the ice divide). Subtle increases in MSGL length on the mid-shelf are associated with GZWs 10–12 (Fig. 5a). Superimposed on these general trends is a considerable finer-scale variation, with short (<2 km long) MSGLs ubiquitous along the trough axis and in close proximity to much longer lineations (Figs 4, 5a). The highest MSGL densities occur along the central axis of the trough and on the outer shelf between GZWs 3 and 4 (Fig. 5b). A close correlation between MSGL density and GZW position, with MSGLs tending to cluster on the gentle back-slope of the wedges, is also revealed in Figure 5b.
The median height of all the measured MSGLs along the trough is 7.5 m. However, the median MSGL height of each cross-profile transect within Marguerite Trough ranges from 1 to 30 m, with a clear downward trend with distance from the ice divide (Fig. 6a). On the outer shelf (from ~650 km along MBIS from the ice divide), where MSGLs are much more densely packed, the consistency of heights (median of ~2 m) over a distance of over 100 km is striking. Conversely, on the mid- and inner-shelves, MSGL heights are more variable and can reach >10 m in height (Fig. 6a).
The median spacing of all mapped MSGLs along the trough is 335 m. As with the heights, the median MSGL spacing of each cross-profile transect is remarkably consistent across the outer shelf (250–300 m) (Fig. 6b). Although there is not a clear trend with distance from the ice divide, the median spacing becomes much more variable on the mid- and inner-shelves, ranging between 100 and 1500 m.
4.3. Sediment thickness, flux and deposition
4.3.1. Soft till thickness
The thickness of the soft till becomes increasingly patchy towards the mid- and inner-shelf (Fig. 7). The ~3000 km2 extent of soft till on the outer shelf has a mean thickness of 5.9 m, reaches a maximum of 19 m and has a total volume of 17.5 km3. However, the layer thickness is variable, with discrete zones of thicker till prevalent towards the centre of the trough (Fig. 7). The spatial distribution and thickness of soft till is consistent with previous results from Dowdeswell and others (Reference Dowdeswell, Cofaigh and Pudsey2004b) and is similar to thicknesses calculated for the acoustically transparent unit on the bed of palaeo-ice streams in the NE Antarctic Peninsula (Reinardy and others, Reference Reinardy2011b).
4.3.2. Postglacial sediment thickness
The spatial distribution and thickness of all postglacial sediments overlying the subglacial till, including deglacial sediments, along the length of Marguerite Trough, gives a volume of 17 km3 (Fig. 8). The inner shelf is characterised by a patchy distribution of postglacial deposits comprising infills of up to 10 m thickness in topographic lows and <1 m thick veneers over bedrock highs (Fig. 8). The western part of the mid-shelf trough is covered by 1–6 m thick sequences of postglacial sediments (Fig. 8). These deposits occur in close association with GZWs 11–12, with the thickest postglacial sediments found in front of major meltwater outlets (Fig. 8) (see also Klages and others, Reference Klages2014, from the western Amundsen Sea). In general, the postglacial sediment cover is relatively thin on the outer shelf (cf. Ó Cofaigh and others, Reference Ó Cofaigh2005), although >2 m thick postglacial sediment drapes are observed directly offshore from GZWs 6, 7 and 9 (Fig. 8).
4.4. Relationship between soft till thickness, distance along Marguerite Trough and MSGL length and density
We observe a significant scatter between MSGL length and density (Fig. 9), although some of the longest lineations (>8 km) tend to occur in clusters (>2 m km−2). Indeed, isolated lineations are typically short (<5 km) and the lowest densities are associated with the shortest MSGLs (Fig. 9). However, the greatest densities (>5 m km−2) are not necessarily associated with the longest lineations (Fig. 9). MSGL length and density clearly increase downstream with distance from the ice divide (Fig. 9a), although there is some variability along the trough (see Fig. 4). Figures 5a, 9b reveal a close relationship between the length and density of MSGLs and the thickness of soft till. This is further demonstrated by the comparison of soft till thickness with MSGL length (Fig. 10), which shows that the longest MSGLs occur in soft till of intermediate thickness (~6–12 m) and not in the thickest soft till layers (>12 m). This trend does not result from the artificial shortening of MSGL lengths by iceberg-keel ploughing on the outer shelf (see Fig. 2). It is in the zone of intermediate soft till thickness, where the densities are also highest (Figs 9 and 10). Furthermore, the longest MSGLs (>10 km) and densest MSGL concentrations do not form in soft till <5 m thick (Fig. 10). Because a basal reflector was not recorded beneath very thick accumulations of soft till, such as under GZWs, this dataset remains incomplete. Nevertheless, although the GZWs probably represent some of the thickest accumulations of soft till, their back-slopes support shorter MSGLs compared with those on the outer-most shelf (Fig. 5a).
5. DISCUSSION
5.1. MSGL formation
On the mid-shelf, seismic and TOPAS sub-bottom profiler data indicate that bedrock is close to the surface (Kennedy and Anderson, Reference Kennedy and Anderson1989; Bart and Anderson, Reference Bart and Anderson1995; Ó Cofaigh and others, Reference Ó Cofaigh2005; Anderson and Oakes-Fretwell, Reference Anderson and Oakes-Fretwell2008). Thus, the form (height and width) of MSGLs in this region may have been at least partially influenced by underlying bedrock properties. This is consistent with variable and high relief MSGLs (up to 30 m high) on the mid-shelf (Fig. 6a). Geologically-controlled MSGLs are likely to be more stable than those composed of soft till as the bedrock relief would have acted as pinning points from which MSGLs were seeded and sustained. We therefore exclude features with clear bedrock control in the following discussion.
The large variability in MSGL length and density, and the prevalence of short MSGLs (<2 km) along the entire length of the MBIS bed (Figs 4, 5, 9), implies a complex mode of formation not controlled solely by ice velocity (see also Jamieson and others, Reference Jamieson2016). MSGLs are characterised by subtle shifts in orientation along the length of Marguerite Trough (e.g. upstream and downstream of GZW9: see Fig. 2 inset), which is evidence for a ‘smudged’ glacial bedform signature. However, these changes in direction do not generally manifest themselves as cross-cutting bedforms, which are only occasionally observed on palaeo-ice stream beds (e.g. Evans and others, Reference Evans, Pudsey, Cofaigh, Morris and Domack2005), but rather as the complete re-organisation of the bedform signature linked to halts or slow-downs in grounding-line retreat, or minor readvances. Large regions of the lineated mid- and outer-shelf are associated with GZW features. Given that MSGLs are formed on top of the GZWs (see Fig. 2), we are confident that features in these particular locations relate to the final deglacial imprint of the ice stream, with older attenuated bedforms having been either destroyed or overprinted (Fig. 2; cf. Graham and others, Reference Graham2010; Jakobsson and others, Reference Jakobsson2012). This suggests that overprinting of bedforms occurred at a rate that was able to quickly bury, remould or destroy previous generations of MSGLs formed in soft till and, therefore, that the glacial bedform signature observed in the mid- and outer shelf parts of Marguerite Trough (e.g. the large variability in MSGL length) is not a composite history produced over a long time, i.e. over several thousand to tens of thousands of years. Thus, although MSGLs were constantly generated along the length of the ice stream, the only ones preserved on the sea floor were those formed just (i.e. decades to centuries) prior to deglaciation (e.g. Graham and others, Reference Graham2009). This is supported by the data collected beneath Rutford Ice Stream and Pine Island Glacier (West Antarctica), which show the development of subglacial bedforms over sub-decadal timescales and high rates of subglacial erosion (Smith and others, Reference Smith2007, Reference Smith, Bentley, Bingham and Jordan2012; King and others, Reference King, Hindmarsh and Stokes2009).
We suggest that the variability in MSGL length and density along Marguerite Trough reflects glacial bedforms at different stages of maturity (cf. Stokes and others, Reference Stokes2013), consistent with a constantly evolving ice stream bed (cf. King and others, Reference King, Hindmarsh and Stokes2009; Reinardy and others, Reference Reinardy, Hiemstra, Murray, Hillenbrand and Larter2011a). The large number (Fig. 3) and widespread occurrence of short MSGLs (Fig. 5) is interpreted to record immature bedforms preserved in the early stages of formation and probably formed just before ice retreated from the area. MSGLs longer than 8 km are predominantly associated with a particular thickness range of soft till (6–12 m), only occur on the outermost shelf, and form in clusters (Figs 9 and 10). MSGL length (a potential proxy for growth rate) increases downstream in areas of soft till (Fig. 4). Thus, the highest MSGL densities (bedform generation) and longest MSGLs (bedform elongation) preferentially form in regions underlain by thick, soft till rather than thin soft till or stiff till and are presumably associated with zones where deformation was greatest, i.e. along the central axis of the trough on the outer shelf. This conclusion is supported by TOPAS data revealing a predominantly smooth sub-bottom reflector corresponding to the top of the stiff till, which is therefore not thought to have been involved in MSGL formation (Dowdeswell and others, Reference Dowdeswell, Cofaigh and Pudsey2004a; Ó Cofaigh and others, Reference Ó Cofaigh2005, Reference Ó Cofaigh, Evans, Dowdeswell and Larter2007). Similarly, prominent MSGLs are absent in palaeo-ice stream troughs where local outcrops of stiff till are observed, for example in Robertson Trough, eastern Antarctic Peninsula (Evans and others, Reference Evans, Pudsey, Cofaigh, Morris and Domack2005; Reinardy and others, Reference Reinardy2011b). This is consistent with modelling results, which suggest that MSGL length is linked to the speed of the overlying ice and basal conditions such as shear stress (Jamieson and others, Reference Jamieson2016).
The main theories to explain the formation of MSGLs in soft sediment include: (1) subglacial deformation of till (Hindmarsh, Reference Hindmarsh1998); (2) groove-ploughing by keels in the basal ice (Clark and others, Reference Clark, Tulaczyk, Stokes and Canals2003); (3) meltwater megafloods (Shaw and others, Reference Shaw, Pugin and Young2008); and (4) a subglacial rilling instability in the hydraulic system (Fowler, Reference Fowler2010). None of these theories are, as yet, widely accepted. However, in relation to the MBIS, the consistent spacing and height of MSGLs over a distance of >100 km on the outer shelf of Marguerite Trough (Fig. 6) suggests that MSGLs could represent some form of self-organizing phenomenon (Fowler, Reference Fowler2010; Spagnolo and others, Reference Spagnolo2014). This implies that their spatial arrangement and height are relatively insensitive to local factors (Spagnolo and others, Reference Spagnolo2014; Jamieson and others, Reference Jamieson2016) and might be dictated by an instability process (e.g. Clark, Reference Clark2010; Fowler and Chapwanya, Reference Fowler and Chapwanya2014 for drumlins). Certainly a similar regularity of arrangement and frequency of spacing has been recorded on other palaeo-ice stream beds (Spagnolo and others, Reference Spagnolo2014), and this may imply some common mechanism of formation (e.g. Clark, Reference Clark2010; Fowler and Chapwanya, Reference Fowler and Chapwanya2014 for drumlins).
5.2. Sediment fluxes and formation of GZWs
5.2.1. Soft till
The thickness distribution of soft till (Fig. 7) suggests spatial variability in the magnitude and rate of erosion, transport and deposition of subglacial sediment. For example, linear zones of thick, soft till (and also localised GZW formation: Section 5.2.2), which tend to occur along the central axis of the trough, point to a macro-scale level of organisation indicative of focused sediment delivery along discrete flow corridors. Significantly, these linear zones of thick soft till are associated with the densest clusters of, and the longest, MSGLs; indicating preferential growth of subglacial bedforms in these zones (see Section 5.1). This is similar to observations from the bed beneath Rutford Ice Stream, where MSGLs have formed in the soft, dilatant till rather than in zones of stiffer till (King and others, Reference King, Hindmarsh and Stokes2009).
5.2.2. Mechanisms and durations of GZW formation
Radiocarbon ages on sediment cores suggest that the grounded ice stream stepped back ~140 km from the outer shelf to the mid shelf at ~14 cal. ka BP (Figs 1 and 2). This retreat occurred within the error-margin of the dates. Hence, GZWs 7–10 that are located in this zone must have been deposited relatively rapidly (i.e. within a few centuries) with correspondingly high sediment fluxes if they were formed in their entirety during this period. Given the combined volume of 3.42 km3 for GZWs 7–10 and typical 2-D sediment fluxes of 100–1000 (m3 a−1 (m grounding line width)−1), the deposition of the GZWs would have taken between 350 and 3500 years (Table 1). If the sediment flux was higher (e.g. 8000 (m3 a−1 (m grounding line width)−1): cf. Nygård and others, Reference Nygård2007), the four GZWs could have formed in just 44 a (Table 1). Thus, sediment fluxes must have been over 1000 (m3 a−1 (m grounding line width)−1) for the GZWs to form within the error range of the radiocarbon dates (Fig. 1). This is consistent with flux rates and timescales of GZW formation calculated for Pine Island Trough in the eastern Amundsen Sea embayment (Graham and others, Reference Graham2010; Jakobsson and others, Reference Jakobsson2012). Indeed, there is a growing body of palaeo-evidence for relatively rapid (centennial-scale) GZW deposition and hence for high sediment fluxes (e.g. Dowdeswell and Fugelli, Reference Dowdeswell and Fugelli2012), although formation of some very large GZWs may have taken up to 25 000 a (e.g. Bart and Owolana, Reference Bart and Owolana2012). High sediment fluxes are consistent with geophysical observations of modern ice stream beds that indicate high rates of sediment erosion (Smith and others, Reference Smith, Bentley, Bingham and Jordan2012) and rapid deposition of subglacial landforms (Smith and others, Reference Smith2007).
Possible fluxes for Eqn (2), given a range of realistic values based on observations for the variables k, M d, S and Us, are shown in Fig. 11. Significantly, the time over which a GZW can be deposited is nonlinearly related to the mobile till layer thickness (S) such that, for S values <1 m, the timing of deposition becomes unrealistically long (103–105 a) given the chronological constraints of the MBIS, and other ice stream retreat patterns (Fig. 11). Thus, assuming that the deposition of the GZWs occurred in <1000 a, then either S values of >1 m or very high ice-flow speeds (upwards of 6000 m a−1), significantly above that modelled for this ice stream (Jamieson and others, Reference Jamieson2012, Reference Jamieson, Vieli, Ó Cofaigh, Stokes, Livingstone and Hillenbrand2014, Reference Jamieson2016), are required for the formation of the GZWs solely by advection of deformation till (Fig. 11). This is significant, because till is considered to behave plastically, with deformation concentrated along shallow shear planes (e.g. Tulaczyk and others, Reference Tulaczyk, Kamb and Engelhardt2000a, Reference Tulaczyk, Kamb and Engelhardtb; Kavanaugh and Clarke, Reference Kavanaugh and Clarke2006). This would limit S to values <1 m and provide relatively small sediment fluxes, thereby precluding the rapid formation of GZWs by till advection to the grounding line (e.g. Alley and others, Reference Alley, Blankenship, Bentley and Rooney1987). In order to reconcile these observations it might be necessary to invoke additional sediment transport by water or basal freeze-on (e.g. Christoffersen and others, Reference Christoffersen, Tulaczyk and Behar2010), or that GZWs may have been partially or wholly reworked from pre-existing sediment accumulations.
The paucity of mapped GZWs on the inner- and mid-shelf of Marguerite Trough, where retreat was much slower (Fig. 1), is probably a direct consequence of ‘till starvation’ as the ice stream retreated onto the hard bedrock, which is more resistant to subglacial erosion than the sedimentary substrate on the outer shelf, and because of reduced sediment supply from upstream. This control on subglacial sediment supply is likely to be accentuated by the availability of sediment along Antarctic palaeo-ice streams, with soft till overlying sedimentary strata on the outer shelf grading into hard bedrock on the inner shelf (Wellner and others, Reference Wellner, Lowe, Shipp and Anderson2001, Reference Wellner, Heroy and Anderson2006; Livingstone and others, Reference Livingstone2012).
6. CONCLUSIONS
We analysed the spatial pattern and morphometry of >17 000 glacial landforms along the bed of the MBIS Trough, western Antarctic Peninsula (Fig. 2). This has resulted in the following conclusions:
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The glacial bedform imprint reflects a time-transgressive signature, whereby MSGLs formed in soft till on the mid- and outer-shelf were being constantly generated, remoulded and destroyed and/or buried along the length of the ice stream, whereas features carved into bedrock on the inner shelf were probably formed over multiple glacial cycles. The only MSGLs preserved are those that formed just prior to the last deglaciation (cf. Graham and others, Reference Graham2009).
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The variability in MSGL length and density observed along the length of the MBIS bed is indicative of a constantly evolving bed reflecting bedforms at different stages of maturity. The large number and widespread occurrence of short MSGLs (<2 km) nestled among longer lineations (>10 km) probably reflects immature bedforms at an early stage of development.
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Longer MSGLs cluster together towards the continental shelf edge along the central axis of the trough and are associated with zones of intermediate thickness (6–12 m) of soft till. Lineation growth and formation is therefore associated with regions where deformation was presumably the greatest.
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The consistent spacing (250–300 m) and height (~2 m) of MSGLs on the outer shelf of Marguerite Trough supports the idea that MSGLs represent a self-organizing phenomenon and thus their spatial arrangement and height might be dictated by an instability process (e.g. Clark, Reference Clark2010; Fowler and Chapwanya, Reference Fowler and Chapwanya2014). Variations in MSGL height and spacing on the middle shelf likely reflect an underlying geological control.
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Linear zones of thick soft till and localised GZW formation imply focused sediment delivery along discrete flow corridors within the MBIS. This finding indicates spatial variability in the rate and magnitude of erosion, transport and deposition of subglacial till as well as the processes of deformation and lodgement.
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The GZWs on the outer shelf of Marguerite Trough are likely to have formed within ~1000 a. Therefore, the till fluxes were probably up to 1000 (m3 a−1 (m grounding line width)-1) (assuming no additional processes of sediment supply, such as basal freeze-on or subglacial meltwater flow). Soft till advection is primarily controlled by the depth of the mobile till layer, which must have been >1 m thick, or associated with rapid basal sliding velocities (upwards of 6 km a−1) to produce the necessary sediment volumes to form the GZWs.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This work was funded by Natural Environmental Research Council (NERC) UK standard grants NE/G015430/1 and NE/G018677/1. Jamieson was supported by NERC Fellowship NE/J018333/1 and Spagnolo was supported by NERC new investigator grant NE/J004766/1. Underlying data are available by request to Livingstone. This research would not have been possible without the hard work of scientists and crew during research cruises JR59, JR71, JR157 and NBP0201. We thank two anonymous reviewers for their comments, which helped to improve the manuscript. We also thank Jeremy Ely for his comments on an earlier draft.