학술논문

Recent retreat of Columbia Glacier, Alaska; millennial context
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Geology (Boulder). 45(6):547-550
Subject
24|Quaternary geology
03|Geochronology
absolute age
Alaska
alkali metals
anhysteretic remanent magnetization
C-14
carbon
Cenozoic
cesium
chronostratigraphy
Chugach Mountains
Columbia Glacier
cores
Cs-137
deglaciation
geochemistry
glaciers
global change
global warming
Holocene
isotopes
lead
lithostratigraphy
magnetic properties
magnetic susceptibility
magnetization
magnetostratigraphy
marine sediments
metals
models
paleoclimatology
paleomagnetism
Pb-210
Prince William Sound
provenance
Quaternary
radioactive isotopes
remanent magnetization
sediments
tree rings
United States
upper Holocene
Language
English
ISSN
0091-7613
Abstract
Columbia Glacier in Prince William Sound, Alaska, has retreated ∼20 km in the past three decades. We use marine sediment records to document the Columbia Glacier advance and retreat history over the past 1.6 k.y. in an effort to place its recent retreat in the context of the Common Era (C.E.). A change in magnetic mineralogy coincided with a shift in sediment geochemistry ca. 0.9 ka. This provenance change documents the advance of Columbia Glacier across a fault, resulting in glacial erosion of mafic rocks near the coast; this agrees with the timing of ice advance reconstructed using dendrochronology. Our marine provenance records show that Columbia Glacier remained advanced south of this fault into the 21st century. Columbia Glacier has now retreated north of this fault, making its recent retreat unprecedented since before ca. 0.9 ka. Southern Alaska temperatures have now warmed to pre-0.9 ka levels, based on tree-ring and reanalysis data. We show with glacier model simulations that the warming between C.E. 1910 and 1980, that includes anthropogenic forcing, was sufficient to trigger the recent retreat of Columbia Glacier from its extended position of the past 0.9 k.y., consistent with our data-driven assessment of the relationship between regional climate change and glacier extent. We conclude that the recent retreat of Columbia Glacier is a response to climate change rather than part of a natural internal tidewater-glacier oscillation.