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Browsing by Author "Hemming, S. R."
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Item Evidence for Extending Anomalous Miocene Volcanism at the Edge of the East Antarctic Craton(Wiley, 2018-04) Licht, Kathy J.; Groth, T.; Townsend, J. P.; Hennessy, Andrea J.; Hemming, S. R.; Flood, T. P.; Studinger, M.; Earth Sciences, School of ScienceUsing field observations followed by petrological, geochemical, geochronological, and geophysical data, we infer the presence of a previously unknown Miocene subglacial volcanic center ~230 km from the South Pole. Evidence of volcanism is from boulders of olivine‐bearing amygdaloidal/vesicular basalt and hyaloclastite deposited in a moraine in the southern Transantarctic Mountains. 40Ar/39Ar ages from five specimens plus U‐Pb ages of detrital zircon from glacial till indicate igneous activity 25–17 Ma. The likely source of the volcanism is a circular −735 nT magnetic anomaly 60 km upflow from the sampling site. Subaqueous textures of the volcanics indicate eruption beneath ice or into water at the margin of an ice mass during the early Miocene. These rocks record the southernmost Cenozoic volcanism in Antarctica and expand the known extent of the oldest lavas associated with West Antarctic Rift system. They may be an expression of lithospheric foundering beneath the southern Transantarctic Mountains.Item A large West Antarctic Ice Sheet explains early Neogene sea-level amplitude(Nature, 2021) Marschalek, J. W.; Zurli, L.; Talarico, F.; van de Flierdt, T.; Vermeesch, P.; Carter, A.; Beny, F.; Bout-Roumazeilles, V.; Sangiorgi, F.; Hemming, S. R.; Pérez, L. F.; Colleoni, F.; Prebble, J. G.; van Peer, T. E.; Perotti, M.; Shevenell, A. E.; Browne, I.; Kulhanek, D. K.; Levy, R.; Harwood, D.; Sullivan, N. B.; Meyers, S. R.; Griffith, E. M.; Hillenbrand, C.-D.; Gasson, E.; Siegert, M. J.; Keisling, B.; Licht, K. J.; Kuhn, G.; Dodd, J. P.; Boshuis, C.; De Santis, L.; McKay, R. M.; IODP Expedition 374; Ash, Jeanine; Beny, François; Browne, Imogen M.; Cortese, Giuseppe; De Santis, Laura; Dodd, Justin P.; Esper, Oliver M.; Gales, Jenny A.; Harwood, David M.; Ishino, Saki; Keisling, Benjamin A.; Kim, Sookwan; Kim, Sunghan; Kulhanek, Denise K.; Laberg, Jan Sverre; Leckie, R. Mark; McKay, Robert M.; Müller, Juliane; Patterson, Molly O.; Romans, Brian W.; Romero, Oscar E.; Sangiorgi, Francesca; Seki, Osamu; Shevenell, Amelia E.; Singh, Shiv M.; Cordeiro de Sousa, Isabela M.; Sugisaki, Saiko T.; van de Flierdt, Tina; van Peer, Tim E.; Xiao, Whenshen; Xiong, Zhifang; Earth Sciences, School of ScienceEarly to Middle Miocene sea-level oscillations of approximately 40-60 m estimated from far-field records1-3 are interpreted to reflect the loss of virtually all East Antarctic ice during peak warmth2. This contrasts with ice-sheet model experiments suggesting most terrestrial ice in East Antarctica was retained even during the warmest intervals of the Middle Miocene4,5. Data and model outputs can be reconciled if a large West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) existed and expanded across most of the outer continental shelf during the Early Miocene, accounting for maximum ice-sheet volumes. Here we provide the earliest geological evidence proving large WAIS expansions occurred during the Early Miocene (~17.72-17.40 Ma). Geochemical and petrographic data show glacimarine sediments recovered at International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Site U1521 in the central Ross Sea derive from West Antarctica, requiring the presence of a WAIS covering most of the Ross Sea continental shelf. Seismic, lithological and palynological data reveal the intermittent proximity of grounded ice to Site U1521. The erosion rate calculated from this sediment package greatly exceeds the long-term mean, implying rapid erosion of West Antarctica. This interval therefore captures a key step in the genesis of a marine-based WAIS and a tipping point in Antarctic ice-sheet evolution.