학술논문

Late Cenozoic paleoenvironment in southern Victoria Land, Antarctica, based on a polar glaciolacustrine deposit in western Victoria Valley
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Geological Society of America Bulletin. 114(5):605-618
Subject
24|Quaternary geology
absolute age
algae
Antarctic ice sheet
Antarctica
Cenozoic
clastic sediments
dates
depositional environment
diamicton
drift
dry valleys
East Antarctica
glacial environment
glacial features
glacial geology
glacial lakes
glaciolacustrine environment
ice
ice cover
ice sheets
lacustrine environment
lake ice
lake sediments
lakes
McMurdo dry valleys
microfossils
paleoenvironment
Plantae
Pleistocene
Quaternary
sediments
Transantarctic Mountains
upper Cenozoic
Victoria Land
Victoria Valley
Wright Valley
Language
English
ISSN
0016-7606
Abstract
Situated in the Transantarctic Mountains, western Victoria Valley is in a key position to test the late Cenozoic stability of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet, as well as that of the surrounding landscape surface. Victoria drift, which covers most of western Victoria Valley, represents a peculiar yet common type of deposit in the region. The sedimentology of Victoria drift is dominated by loose, sorted material, which preserves lacustrine algae, quite unlike tills in the Dry Valleys. Ridges characterize its morphology. Extraordinarily old ridges and mounds as well as fresh features and unweathered and perched boulders occur without apparent order. Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon dates of algae from within Victoria drift range from 11,054 ± 95 to >45,000 14C yr B.P. and are not arrayed in chronological order across the drift sheet. Resting on a Miocene erosion surface, Victoria drift is the only widespread deposit in western Victoria Valley younger than ca. 14 Ma. One hypothesis is that the drift consists of moraines. The strength of this hypothesis is that it explains the arcuate form of many ridges. However, it does not explain the sedimentology, weathering characteristics, or radiocarbon dates. A second hypothesis is that Victoria drift is a unique polar glaciolacustrine sediment facies deposited by a "lake-ice conveyer." The morphologic features, sedimentology, weathering characteristics, and radiocarbon dates of the drift are all consistent with deposition in a perennially ice-covered lake. This second hypothesis implies polar glacial conditions during deposition of the drift sheet in order to maintain a permanently ice-covered proglacial lake.