1. INTRODUCTION
Glaciers and ice sheets are important agents of sediment transport and geomorphic change, but the rate of sediment cycling depends considerably on glacial dynamics and the thermal properties of the ice body. Major differences in the effect of glaciers on landscapes exist between cold-based and warm-based ice, and between regions where surface meltwater is routed to the bed and regions that are too cold to allow for surface melt (Alley and others, Reference Alley1997). Much of the sediment transport and erosion performed by glaciers occurs within a several-meter-thick basal ice layer. Within basal ice layers, sediment can either be dispersed throughout the ice (typically in low concentrations) or laminated in distinct layers; grain size distributions in basal sediments can range from clay to boulder-sized particles (Knight, Reference Knight1997). The highest erosion rates are found in warm-based, tectonically active settings (Hallet and others, Reference Hallet, Hunter and Bogen1996). However, active erosion and deposition in cold-based glacier settings are sometimes evidenced by the geomorphology of the glaciers and the nature of sediment deposits (Atkins and others, Reference Atkins, Barrett and Hicock2002).
The physical mechanisms underlying the entrainment of debris in ice have long been considered by glaciologists (e.g. Weertman, Reference Weertman1961). The two primary mechanisms are regelation, whereby ice melts and refreezes around sediment grains under the pressure of the overlying ice (Philip, Reference Philip1980; Hubbard and Sharp, Reference Hubbard and Sharp1993) and freeze-on through glacio-hydraulic super cooling, whereby adverse gradients in bed slope cause the change in pressure melting point to exceed heat generated by motion (Lawson and others, Reference Lawson1998). Freeze-on processes transfer sediment from the bed to the overlying ice and in the process also draw porewater from till to form the clean or dirty ice layers of ice stream beds (Christoffersen and others, Reference Christoffersen, Tulaczyk, Carsey and Behar2006). Both these mechanisms are typically conceived as occurring in warm-based ice, yet sediment entrainment is documented in settings known to contain only cold-based ice. For example, sediment entrainment in an ice bed with temperatures as cold as −17°C was attributed to interfacial films of liquid water capable of performing regelation where bulk melting does not occur (Cuffey and others, Reference Cuffey2000). Such interfacial films allow entrainment of sediment at temperatures as low as −30°C under laboratory conditions (Dash and others, Reference Dash, Rempel and Wettlaufer2006). Shearing entrainment mechanisms are evident in sub-freezing beds where actively deforming ice rides up against stagnant or rigid ice and entrains sediment through interfacial processes (Chinn, Reference Chinn1991; Tison and others, Reference Tison, Petit, Barnola and Maheney1993). In the absence of ice temperature measurements at the location of sediment entrainment, the distinction between warm-based and cold-based entrainment mechanisms is inferred from indirect evidence such as stable isotopes and ice texture.
In this study, we employ stable isotopes and shallow ice core texture analyses to better understand debris delivery to Antarctic blue ice moraines and the age of the ice from which the moraines derive. Blue ice moraines occur laterally along distributary outlet glaciers and ice streams that pass between mountains or by nunataks and are common in regions such as the Transantarctic Mountains. Sublimation in blue ice areas draws in the ice that underlies the ablating surface. Such upwardly fluxing ice often contain meteorites (Whillans and Cassidy, Reference Whillans and Cassidy1983) and archives of past glacial periods (Bintanja, Reference Bintanja1999; Turney and others, Reference Turney2013). The sediments that emerge at the termini of blue ice areas are presumed to come from the basal ice layers of the adjoining glacial outlet, and their accumulation forms the blue ice moraines (Bader and others, Reference Bader, Licht, Kaplan, Kassab and Winckler2017). Blue ice moraines have been frequently studied as terrestrial repositories of Antarctica's subglacial sediment and unexposed rock types (Palmer and others, Reference Palmer, Licht, Swope, Hemming, Rasbury, Hemming and Riggs2012), aiding in the reconstruction of past ice-sheet behavior (Fogwill and others, Reference Fogwill, Hein, Bentley and Sugden2012; Sugden and others, Reference Sugden2014; Licht and Hemming, Reference Licht and Hemming2017). We have two principal objectives in analyzing the stable isotopes and ice core textures of blue ice moraines: (1) to constrain the processes of sediment entrainment that lead to moraine formation, particularly whether it is warm or cold based and whether open system hydrologic conditions prevail; and (2) to constrain the age of the ice within the moraines and the transport times of the subglacial sediment. These objectives will aid assessments of these moraines as archives of Antarctica's glacial history.
2. BACKGROUND
The subglacial processes that entrain sediment in ice can alter the ice's oxygen and hydrogen stable isotope composition. When ice is melted and refrozen, heavier isotopes are preferentially retained, while lighter isotopes are preferentially mobile within the subglacial hydrologic system. Because of the larger mass difference, this effect occurs more strongly with oxygen than hydrogen isotopes, and the stable isotopes of debris-laden basal ice typically diverge from the 8 : 1 ratio of δ2H (δD) to δ18O that is seen in meteoric waters (Dansgaard, Reference Dansgaard1964).
Pioneering work on the stable isotopes of basal ice identified three subglacial behaviors that affect stable isotope composition: freezing in a closed system, freezing in an open system where the meltwater has a single source (e.g. only basal ice), and freezing in an open system where waters of multiple compositions are mixed (e.g. a mix of basal and surface meltwaters) (Jouzel and Souchez, Reference Jouzel and Souchez1982; Souchez and Jouzel, Reference Souchez and Jouzel1984; Souchez and de Groote, Reference Souchez and de Groote1985). As meltwater refreezes, heavier isotopes will freeze first, causing the remaining meltwater to become progressively depleted. In an open system, water can enter and escape the refreezing site, with depleted meltwaters leaving the system as groundwater or through subglacial conduits. The escape of depleted subglacial water causes ice refreezing in an open system to be enriched in heavy isotopes compared with its source. In a closed system, meltwaters depleted of heavy isotopes are also refrozen, allowing for the formation of both basal ice layers that are enriched and basal ice layers that are depleted of heavy isotopes compared with the source ice (Fig. 1). In both the case of a closed system and an open system where meltwater comes from a single source, the basal ice isotopes will plot along a refreezing slope whose divergence from the meteoric waterline is determined by the abundance of heavy isotopes in the source ice (Jouzel and Souchez, Reference Jouzel and Souchez1982). Laboratory experiments have established the partition coefficients for heavy oxygen and hydrogen in the freezing process (Souchez and Jouzel, Reference Souchez and Jouzel1984; Lehmann and Siegenthaler, Reference Lehmann and Siegenthaler1991; Iverson and Souchez, Reference Iverson and Souchez1996). If the source composition is more depleted of heavy isotopes, the freezing slope is shallower; if it is enriched, the slope is steeper (Fig. 1). Refreezing of a mix of meltwaters of differing isotopic compositions can result in significant divergence from the theoretically predictable refreezing slope. The input of isotopically lighter waters (e.g. from surface melt) will steepen the refreezing slope; the input of isotopically heavier waters will make it less steep (Souchez and de Groote, Reference Souchez and de Groote1985).
This framework has been used to interpret basal ice layers from alpine glaciers, the Greenland ice sheet, and Antarctic ice sheets. In temperate alpine glaciers, open system regelation is frequently documented in basal ice layers (e.g. Hubbard and Sharp, Reference Hubbard and Sharp1993). At many sites, distinct basal ice facies have different isotopic signatures. Laminated layers (associated with regelation processes) have the δD:δ18O slopes predicted from freezing in a closed system or an open system with a single source (i.e. Fig. 1). Dispersed layers (associated with freeze-on processes) have steeper co-isotopic slopes than theoretically expected from single source freezing and suggest input of surface meltwater (Hubbard and Sharp, Reference Hubbard and Sharp1995). Freeze-on processes also generally exclude air bubbles from the ice, whereas regelation-effected ice retains some of the original ice air content (Hubbard and Sharp, Reference Hubbard and Sharp1995). Some high arctic glaciers have greater δD:δ18O slopes in basal ice than in surface snow, suggesting primarily freeze-on (Glasser and Hambrey, Reference Glasser and Hambrey2002), whereas others have basal isotopes consistent with closed system regelation (Gordon and others, Reference Gordon, Darling, Whalley and Gellatly1988). Open system regelation without surface input is evidenced at several sites along the margin of the western Greenland ice sheet (Sugden and others, Reference Sugden1987; Knight, Reference Knight1989). Other western Greenland sites have enrichment slopes that are too low to be explained by simple freezing, possibly due to the exchange of hydroxyls between meltwater and micas or clays (Souchez and others, Reference Souchez1990). Substantial isotopic enrichment is also observed in the silt-rich basal layers of Greenland ice cores (Johnsen and others, Reference Johnsen1997); however in the GRIP core, no change in the co-isotopic slope is observed (Souchez and others, Reference Souchez1994). Similar isotopic enrichment without significant change in co-isotopic slope has been observed in basal ice layers at some Antarctic sites (Iizuka and others, Reference Iizuka, Stake, Shiraiwa and Naruse2001). In cold-based ice that actively entrains sediment in the McMurdo Dry Valleys (−17°C), no isotopic enrichment was observed nor any disturbance in ice gas content (Cuffey and others, Reference Cuffey2000). It is likely that here the interfacial liquid responsible for debris entrainment acted as a closed system in such a way that no isotopic differentiation occurred. By contrast, Adelie Land cores with basal temperatures of −7.5°C have isotope slopes that are consistent with closed system refreezing (Tison and others, Reference Tison, Petit, Barnola and Maheney1993). Debris apron entrainment at the margins of polar glaciers has a co-isotopic signature consistent with refreezing of meltwater mixed with meteoric ice that never melted (Fitzsimons and others, Reference Fitzsimons2008).
Stable isotopes of ice are more frequently employed as temperature proxies than as tracers of subglacial processes and are one of the primary tools used in constructing climate records from ice cores. Large differences in both δD and δ18O are observed between Holocene and Pleistocene periods in ice cores from Greenland and Antarctica, as well as between interstadial and stadial phases of the Pleistocene (e.g. Petit and others, Reference Petit1999; Johnsen and others, Reference Johnsen2001). In East Antarctica, the stable isotope signatures of past periods are known from ice cores taken in both the interior and at the margins of the continent; Holocene δD values vary from −200 to −440‰ with altitude and distance from the coast (Masson and others, Reference Masson2000). At the interior high-elevation sites (such as Vostok, Dome Fuji, Dome C and Dome B), ice from Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) is ~40‰ depleted of deuterium compared with the Holocene; less extreme Pleistocene interstadials (such as oxygen isotope stage 3) are approximately halfway between Holocene and LGM values (Jouzel and others, Reference Jouzel1995; Petit and others, Reference Petit1999; Uemura and others, Reference Uemura2012). When glacial ice originates as surface snow, the altitude, continentality and temperature of the location where the ice initially formed control stable isotope values. If we can account for the effects of subglacial processes, we can reconstruct the environmental conditions under which basal ice initially formed. We can, therefore, use the stable isotopes of basal ice layers to determine whether the ice is sourced locally or from the high-elevation continental interior and whether it dates from Holocene, LGM, or pre-LGM periods. The time and location of ice formation set an upper bound for the time and location of sediment entrainment.
3. FIELD SITE AND METHODS
Ice samples were collected beneath and adjacent to the Mount Achernar moraine (84.2°S, 161°E) during December 2015. This site is located in the central Transantarctic Mountains, on the south side of Law Glacier, near where ice first emerges off the polar plateau (Fig. 2). In this region of Antarctica, mean annual surface temperatures average −40°C and annual snow accumulation are <40 mm a−1 w. e. (Scarrow and others, Reference Scarrow, Balks and Almond2014). A 70–80 mW m−2 geothermal heat flux is modeled for the region, and ice thermodynamics suggest that warm-based ice occurs where ice thickness is ≥1000–1500 m (Pattyn, Reference Pattyn2010; Van Liefferinge and Pattyn, Reference Van Liefferinge and Pattyn2013). Along the blue ice moraine, the ice thickness of Law Glacier is not known in detail but likely varies between 800 and 1200 m (Fretwell and others, Reference Fretwell2013). Patches of warm-based ice are suggested in the thicker regions of Law Glacier by the Pattyn (Reference Pattyn2010) model. Conditions that definitively indicate warm-based conditions occur ~30 km upstream of Mount Achernar Moraine, around the divide between the Law and Marsh Glaciers on the polar plateau (Pattyn, Reference Pattyn2010). The variation in basal conditions along flowline means that sediment emerging from Law Glacier might be entrained through either cold-based mechanisms such as sediment shearing and interfacial effects or warm-based mechanisms such as regelation and freeze-on.
The blue ice moraine at the base of Mount Achernar has a core of glacier ice hundreds of meters thick, which is fed by upward-flowing ice from the Law Glacier (Kassab and others, Reference Kassab2016). Here, sediment emerges through the sublimation of the underlying ice (Bader and others, Reference Bader, Licht, Kaplan, Kassab and Winckler2017). Most of the moraine exhibits a structure of parallel ridges that follow the modern glacial margin, with ridge widths of 50–100 m and narrower troughs. Sediment cover is thicker in the ridges, suggesting that they are related to regions of greater sediment flux from the ice below. Cosmogenic isotopes indicate the oldest parts of the moraine have had at least several hundred ka of surface exposure, perhaps >500 ka and allow us to divide the moraine into distinct sections exposed during the Holocene, LGM and pre-LGM (Kaplan and others, Reference Kaplan2017) (Fig. 2). The different aged portions of the moraine differ in pebble lithology, geomorphology and degree of chemical weathering (Bader and others, Reference Bader, Licht, Kaplan, Kassab and Winckler2017). The sediment becomes thicker away from the moraine-ice margin, with debris ranging from a few centimeters thick near the margin to >1 m thick in the oldest parts of the moraine (Scarrow and others, Reference Scarrow, Balks and Almond2014). In the Holocene section of the moraine, sediment cover is <5 cm thick and is unoxidized. The LGM section has sediment thicknesses of 5–25 cm. Pre-LGM sections have exposure ages of >100 ka, a topographically muted ridge, and trough structure, and sediment depths generally >50 cm. In the Holocene-aged portions of the moraine, the topography is broken up by flat areas of clear ice that appear to be melt ponds (Fig. 2). During the warmest field days in December 2015, the melt was observed in this portion of the moraine where sediment is thinnest, enabled by the absorption of energy by dark sediment even while air temperatures were below freezing. Such ponds occur with diminishing frequency in the LGM-aged portions of the moraine, where they are depressed below the moraine surface by tens of meters and are absent from the oldest portions of the moraine.
Several types of ice samples were collected from the Mount Achernar Moraine: two sets of shallow ice cores and ice surface samples collected along horizontal transects (i.e. along moraine surface) through the Holocene and LGM portions of the moraine (Fig. 2). Three horizontal transects were sampled, one in the widest portion of the moraine and two in the moraine's downstream tail. The horizontal transect samples were collected by shoveling away overlying sediment and breaking up the ice below with an axe. Axed-off pieces were immediately placed in Nasco Whirl-Pak bags, allowed to completely melt and then transferred to 20 mL tubes of borosilicate glass. The transects did not extend into the pre-LGM sections of the moraine, as the sediment cover was prohibitively thick. Six ice samples collected in January 2012 by an Antarctic Search for Meteorites (ANSMET) team were also included in the analysis. These samples were collected from the transition between the clean ice and the moraine and include three debris band samples, two clean ice samples and one sample that contains a thin debris band in otherwise clean ice. The ANSMET samples were collected by extracting 0.125 m3 blocks of ice with steel chisels. The ANSMET samples were kept cold and then melted under laboratory conditions on return from the field. Additionally, we collected two samples of snow and three samples of ice from frozen melt ponds (Fig. 2). The goals in these collections were to test whether the moraine ice or the melt ponds could have formed from local snow and to test if the melt ponds develop a unique isotopic signature.
Shallow, 3″ (7.5 cm) diameter ice cores were collected from two locations. One location is in an area of Law Glacier outside the main body of the moraine, where debris bands reach the surface of otherwise clean ice; the other location is in the LGM section of the main body of the moraine, ~500 m in from the moraine's boundary with clean ice (Fig. 2). The Law Glacier location is also in a blue ice area but lacks substantial debris accumulation. It is possible that the emergence of the debris band is recent or that accumulated debris was removed by active glacier processes. At the Law Glacier location, two ice cores were collected; at the moraine location, three ice cores were collected. Ice cores were collected by hand auger to depths of 50–180 cm. Ice was first photographed and then immediately transferred to an insulated storage system where it was not allowed to melt until it reached a laboratory setting. In the laboratory, the cores were sectioned, split and analyzed for sediment and bubble content. On the ends of core sections, gas bubble presence and morphology were captured by light microscopy at the Crary Laboratory in McMurdo Station. Semi-cylindrical sections of core were melted and filtered so that ice density and sediment content could be assessed. Separate splits were allowed to completely melt and were transferred to 20 mL plastic containers for stable isotope analysis.
At Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis, the stable isotope samples were centrifuged in an Eppendore Centrifuge 5810 for 10 min each to remove any sediment. (In most cases, little or no sediment was removed by this process.) The samples were then transferred into vials and analyzed by a Picarro L2130-i cavity ringdown spectrometer (isotopic water analyzer) equipped with A0211 vaporization module. The ratio of 18O to 16O and of deuterium to protonium was determined in ppm in relation to Vienna Standard Mean Ocean Water (VSMOW). Results were corrected for memory, drift and offset from the VSMOW scale using a low (−54.55‰; USGS49), mid-range (−13.39‰; Picarro 3C), and high standard (12.34‰; Picarro ER1) following the methods of Geldern and Barth (Reference Geldern and Barth2012).
4. RESULTS
4.1. Ice bubbles and sediment textures
The sediment in the Mount Achernar Moraine ice cores is ‘clotted’, with most sediment occurring in 1–5 mm irregular spheres. Similar clots have been described in the upper portions of the basal ice layer of the Greenland ice sheet (e.g. Knight and others, Reference Knight, Sugden and Minty1994) and in the offshore record of Antarctica (Cowan and others, Reference Cowan, Christoffersen and Powell2012; Licht and Palmer, Reference Licht and Palmer2013). The total sediment load in the cores is generally <2% sediment by weight (Table 1). The two ice core sites differ appreciably in the distribution of the sediment clots. The debris band in the Law Glacier ice cores is ~5 cm wide and dips at an 85° angle with respect to the ice surface. The clots are fairly evenly distributed within in this debris-bearing zone. The moraine ice cores collected contain several separate thin debris bands, ~1 cm thick and dipping 30–60° from the ice surface. These discrete bands bear all of the ice cores’ sediment, matching the description of laminated basal ice (Knight, Reference Knight1994). The Law Glacier ice cores bear several healed cracks or shear planes that are not observed in the cores from the moraine.
All the sampled ice is bubble-rich, but with considerable variation in the bubble size, morphology and distribution. Bubble morphologies include: spherical forms ~250–750 µm in diameter, spherical forms ~25–75 µm in diameter, elongate forms and irregular forms (Fig. 3). The bimodal distribution of spherical bubbles has been previously observed in Antarctic ice forming from firn (Lipenkov, Reference Lipenkov2000). In some locations within the core, bubbles line up as planar features; in others, the bubbles are uniformly distributed. In some sections, the elongate bubbles appear to be oriented as a metamorphic texture, deforming around sediment clots and aligning toward ice crystal orientation. Sediment clots are not in or adjacent to bubbles.
Several of the photographed samples also contain vapor figures – thin hexagonal prisms ~500–1000 µm in diameter and <100 µm in width. Vapor figures are water vapor-filled negative crystals formed from the melting and refreezing of crystalline ice under conditions where a thermal gradient allows faster refreezing on one side of the crystal (Nakaya, Reference Nakaya1956). Vapor figures migrate along thermal gradients as the ice refreezes, often elongating, deforming or splitting them into minute droplets (Nakaya, Reference Nakaya1956). Evidence of such thermal migration is demonstrated in several of the ice core photographs (Fig. 3). The vapor figures could also be interpreted as hexagonal voids formed during the mechanical relaxation of the ice, such as are seen when ice cores are brought up from depths ~>1000 m (Gow, Reference Gow1971). However, such voids form on a far smaller scale (<300 µm diameter) and lack the thermal migration features that we observe.
There are substantial differences in the distribution of bubble and vapor figure morphologies between the Law Glacier ice cores (Fig. 3a) and the moraine ice cores (Fig. 3b). The moraine ice cores have abundant vapor figures; whereas vapor figures are nearly absent from the Law Glacier ice cores. The Law Glacier ice has a greater abundance of spherical bubbles, particularly of smaller size. This is consistent with substantial melt and refreezing occurring in the morainal ice and greater preservation of original glacial ice in the debris bands of the Law Glacier ice.
4.2. Isotope data
Stable isotope values from the study area range from −59 to −47‰ δ18O and from −375 to −465‰ δD (Fig. 4). The ice isotopes plot in two distinct groups: One group (group A) consists of the shallow ice cores on Law Glacier and the 2012 ANSMET samples collected in clean ice. The other (group B) consists of all the moraine ice core samples, all of the samples of bulk ice collected from the moraine proper and the 2012 ANSMET samples collected in debris bands emerging from Law Glacier immediately adjacent to the moraine (Fig. 2). The δD:δ18O slope of group A is 6.69 ± 1.39 (S.E.); the slope of the group B is 5.35 ± 0.92 (S.E.). Theoretical refreezing slopes range from 4.2 to 4.6 for the isotopic values found in the study area (Fig. 1). Both slopes are steeper than would be expected for simple refreezing of a single reservoir. However, the group B slope is within the standard error of the theoretical refreezing slopes, whereas the group A data cannot be explained by refreezing of ice of consistent initial composition.
Both the Holocene aged and Pleistocene aged portions of the moraine (surface exposure ages in Kaplan and others, Reference Kaplan2017) plot along the same enrichment trend, suggesting that the source ice has similar isotopic compositions for both (Fig. 4, Tables 1 and 2). However, the ice in the Pleistocene aged portion of the moraine is consistently more isotopically enriched than the ice in the Holocene aged portion. Because the ice samples from the Pleistocene section of the moraine are more enriched in heavy isotopes from the meteoric waterline than the 2.9‰ δ18O theoretically possible from a single refreezing event (Fig. 1), progressive enrichment events are strongly suggested.
The melt-pond ice plots along the same trend as the surrounding moraine ice (Fig. 4). Ponds may, therefore, experience relatively little isotope loss in their formation. The snow samples are isotopically enriched compared with any of the sampled ice; this comparison suggests that neither the melt ponds, nor the ice underlying the moraine, nor the clean ice in Law Glacier are formed from local snow.
Within the shallow ice cores, isotopic variability with depth differs substantially between the two sampling sites. In the cores from the moraine, ice is in general increasingly enriched in heavy isotopes toward the surface (Fig. 5). However, these cores also feature sediment bands in their upper sections that are absent from lower portions and only contain five measurements in total. In the Law Glacier cores, enrichment excursions occur in individual subsamples, but these values generally return to previous values adjacent to the enriched sample (Fig. 5). The isotopic excursions in the Law Glacier cores occur at the locations with healed cracks or shear planes in the ice.
5. DISCUSSION
5.1. Mechanism of debris entrainment
Nearly all of the sampled sediment-bearing ice of Law Glacier and Mount Achernar Moraine is enriched in 18O and depleted in deuterium excess compared with meteoric water and conversely, no sample is significantly depleted in 18O or enriched in deuterium excess compared with meteoric water. This pattern of enrichment suggests that not all the basal melt has refrozen in a closed system and that meltwater was lost to the subglacial hydraulic system (open system) (Fig. 1). Therefore, our primary hypothesis is that regelation in an open subglacial hydraulic system is responsible for the entrainment of the sediment that supplies Mount Achernar Moraine. An alternative explanation is that interfacial processes in cold-based ice entrained the sediment and that the isotope enrichment occurred when the ice reaches the surface, with light isotopes lost to evaporation or sublimation. Another alternative hypothesis is that exchange between meltwater and isotopes and hydroxyls on micas or clays is the primary cause of isotope enrichment. However, the slope of the group B samples is most consistent with our primary hypothesis (open system regelation). For the group A samples, the slope is too steep for open system regelation alone and mechanisms involving cold-based processes are more plausible.
The ice core internal structures are useful in elucidating the presence of melting and re-freezing processes during sediment entrainment (distinguishing between our primary and alternative hypotheses). The vapor figures that are abundant in the moraine ice core samples form from the internal melting and re-freezing of ice crystals (Fig. 3). If the sediment were entrained through cold-based processes, the morainal ice still must have been at the melting point during at least some portion of its history to produce the vapor figures. The Law Glacier ice cores have far fewer vapor figures in the photomicrographs (Fig. 3a) and less influence of isotopic enrichment than group B (Fig. 4). At that location, some or all of the sediment entrainment may have occurred through cold-based processes. The enrichment occurring primarily along cracks (Fig. 5) is consistent with a shearing mechanism for sediment entrainment that could have been cold-based (Tison and others, Reference Tison, Petit, Barnola and Maheney1993). It is also possible that meltwater refroze together with unaffected meteoric ice to form an intermediate slope (Fitzsimons and others, Reference Fitzsimons2008).
The sublimation-driven mass loss in the blue ice area and the presence of surface melt ponds in the moraine motivates consideration of surface mass loss as a cause of isotopic enrichment. Though sublimation and melt do not cause isotopic fractionation (Moser and Stichler, Reference Moser, Stichler, Fritz and Fontes1980), loss to evaporation before refreezing or partial refreezing of the sublimate can both cause isotopic enrichment and divergence from the meteoric waterline. Enrichment from the partial freezing of sublimate has been documented in snow and firn (Stichler and others, Reference Stichler2001; Sokratov and Golubev, Reference Sokratov and Golubev2009). However, such effects are not generally observed in solid ice, as the sublimating surface does not have the porosity necessary to trap and refreeze the sublimate (Moser and Stichler, Reference Moser, Stichler, Fritz and Fontes1980; Sokratov and Golubev, Reference Sokratov and Golubev2009). And though the composition of the surface melt ponds plots along the same enrichment trend as other ice samples, the texture of the bulk ice and ice core samples is very different from those of the melt ponds. Original, spherical air bubbles are preserved in the nonpond ice, as are sediment clots. Both of these features are disturbed by bulk refreezing processes and are absent from the melt pond samples. Contrastingly, the retention of clots and bubbles has been documented in the regelation enrichment process (Hubbard and Sharp, Reference Hubbard and Sharp1995). Furthermore, enrichment is seen at depth in the ice cores (Fig. 5), well below the influence of surface melt or sublimation. We, therefore, consider substantial evaporation or sublimation enrichment unlikely for either of the isotope groups.
The exchange between meltwater and hydroxyl-bearing sediment also fails to explain the variation within the ice cores. Under that hypothesis, we would expect to see the greatest enrichment in samples with the highest sediment load. Instead, large isotopic excursions are seen below cracks or shear planes in the ice (Fig. 5). Furthermore, isotope enrichment from hydroxyls produces enrichment slopes far below those predicted theoretically for regelation enrichment (Souchez and others, Reference Souchez1990). Contrastingly, the slopes of the two isotope groups are either slightly or significantly larger than theoretical regelation enrichment slopes.
Hence, the only hypothesis consistent with the isotope and ice texture data are that sediment in the main part of Mount Achernar Moraine was entrained through warm-based processes, such as regelation (Figs 1 and 4). Alternative mechanisms of isotope enrichment (such as surface melting and exchange on hydroxyls) do not explain the ice textures or the isotope data. The group A data (clean ice and the Law Glacier ice cores) did not plot along a regelation enrichment slope, so it is conceivable that cold-based processes with little isotopic effect were responsible for sediment entrainment at the Law Glacier ice core location, with enrichment along cracks and shear planes. It is also conceivable that a reservoir of isotopically heavier water was also mixing into the Law Glacier ice core samples during open system subglacial freezing (Souchez and de Groote, Reference Souchez and de Groote1985). However, the presence of air bubbles in the group A ice core suggests against bulk freeze-on. There may, therefore, be a mix of thin segments of refrozen ice and meteoric ice in group A (and possibly to a lesser extent in group B), as has been observed at some marginal sites (Fitzsimons and others, Reference Fitzsimons2008).
5.2. Moraine ice origin
The ice underlying Mount Achernar Moraine is almost certainly sourced from the polar plateau and does not originate locally in the Transantarctic Mountains. Local snow is far more isotopically enriched than any of the ice (Fig. 4). Furthermore, the Dominion Range Ice Core, located ~100 km from the site, has Holocene δ18O ~−41‰ and LGM values ~−46‰ (Mayewski and others, Reference Mayewski1990) – well enriched in heavy oxygen from the values found in the moraine ice, which are below −50‰ (Fig. 6). Even at the South Pole, 600 km toward the interior of the continent from the Mount Achernar site, 20th-century snow values are ~−400‰ δD (Jouzel and others, Reference Jouzel, Merlivat, Petit and Lorius1983), enriched compared with any Mount Achernar ice sample (Fig. 6).
We can assess the original isotopic composition of the ice prior to any alteration by subglacial processes by examining the intersection of the trendlines within the isotope groups (A and B) with the meteoric waterline. Both these intersection points are similar to isotope values found in the deep interior of the polar plateau (Fig. 6). The enrichment trend in group A intersects the meteoric waterline at ~δ18O = −54.6‰, δD = −427‰. These values are comparable with Holocene values found at Dome Fuji (3810 m) (Uemura and others, Reference Uemura2012), the oxygen isotope stage (OIS) 5a/5c and OIS 3 values found at Dome C (3233 m) (Augustin and others, Reference Augustin2004), and OIS 5e values from Vostok (Petit and others, Reference Petit1999). The enrichment trend for group B intersects the meteoric waterline at ~δ18O = −58.3‰, δD = −456‰, comparable with LGM values from Dome Fuji and OIS 5a/5c Pleistocene interstadials from Vostok (Fig. 6). The difference between the groups is ~30‰ δD. At most Antarctic ice core sites on the polar plateau, the difference between the mid-Holocene and the LGM is ~40‰ δD, whereas the most recent Pleistocene interstadial (OIS 3) is ~20‰ δD above the LGM. Approximately 30‰ δD differences are found between OIS 5a/5c and extreme stadials such as oxygen isotope stages 2, 4 and 6.
It is difficult to reconcile a Holocene ice age for group A with the ~1000 km distance between Mount Achernar and regions with >3500 m elevation on the polar plateau, where Holocene ice of group A's isotopic composition is found. Ice surface velocities are order of 10 m a−1 or less for most of the distance (Rignot and others, Reference Rignot, Mouginot and Scheuchl2011), an order of magnitude below the ~100 m a−1 transport speed needed to flux ice from the deep interior to Mount Achernar Moraine within Holocene time frames. We, therefore, consider it most likely that the groups A and B contrast Pleistocene interstadial and stadial periods. The clean ice and Law Glacier ice cores (group A) are from an interstadial period, whereas the moraine ice (group B) is from a stadial period. Because the rate of motion is higher, we suspect that Law Glacier ice is younger than the ice underlying the moraine. So, the stadial period probably pre-dates the interstadial period. Because the difference in isotopic enrichment between the groups is larger than the difference between marine isotope stages 3 and 4 in interior ice cores (Fig. 6), we infer that the ice from group A formed during OIS 5a at the earliest. This means that the ice in Law Glacier is >80 000-years old and the ice underlying the moraine is probably older still. Near the edge of the moraine, the difference between stadial and interstadial ice is expressed on a short (<10 m) spatial scale, with clean ice adjacent to the moraine forming during an interstadial and sediment-bearing ice supplying the moraine forming during a stadial. Because sediment-bearing stadial ice is interleaved with clean interstadial ice, the ice was likely sheared or thrust over before emerging into the blue ice area.
The time period in which the ice formed can be contrasted with the time period at which the sediment emerged on Mount Achernar Moraine to assess ice transport times. Sections of the Mount Achernar Moraine contain sediment that emerged from the ice within the past 1–6 ka (Kaplan and others, Reference Kaplan2017) and the oldest sediment from under which ice samples were collected is LGM age (~20–30 ka) (Fig. 2). Since the isotopes suggest that this ice formed during a Pleistocene stadial period on the high elevation interior of the polar plateau, ice transport times >80 000 years are suggested. In its contemporary configuration, the fast-moving ice that feeds Law Glacier extends only ~50 km inland onto the plateau from Mount Achernar (Rignot and others, Reference Rignot, Mouginot and Scheuchl2011) (Fig. 7). Beyond is a region of very slow-moving ice (<2 m a−1 surface velocity), extending for another ~200 km along flowline direction toward the interior (Fig. 7). Another slow spot in the flowline occurs between 400 and 600 km, corresponding to a relatively flat region in the vertical profile (Fig. 7). Basal ice velocities through the slow spots as modeled with the Albany/FELIX model (Tezuar and others, Reference Tezuar, Perago, Salinger, Tuminaro and Price2015) are <1 m a−1 (MJ Hoffman, personal communication). If the ice fluxing into Mount Achernar moraine was transported from the interior as basal ice, it possibly is multiple hundreds of thousands of years old.
We consider the slow spot between 400 and 600 km along the flowline (Fig. 7) to be the most plausible source of the ice sampled at Mount Achernar Moraine. The region is a few hundred meters higher in elevation than the South Pole and based on altitude and continentality would likely have stable isotope values intermediate to those found at Dome C and those found at Dome Fuji (Fig. 6). Surface ice could plausibly transit the distance in 80–100 ka at the velocities modeled by Rignot and others (Reference Rignot, Mouginot and Scheuchl2011), making group A from OIS 5 and group B from OIS 6 at the earliest. However, alternative interpretations of the isotope and flowline data are also possible.
The distance and time needed to transport the ice from its formation location to Mount Achernar Moraine need not correspond to the residence time nor transport distance of the entrained sediment. Mount Achernar Moraine contains few exotic erratics, suggesting that most of the rock material in the moraine has a provenance similar to the local Beacon Formation bedrock (Bader and others, Reference Bader, Licht, Kaplan, Kassab and Winckler2017). Furthermore, the regelation mechanism of sediment entrainment requires that the water pressure in the subglacial sediment drop below the ice overburden pressure (Philip, Reference Philip1980). Lower subglacial water pressures are associated with faster ice velocities (Iken and Bindschadler, Reference Iken and Bindschadler1986; Stearns and others, Reference Stearns, Smith and Hamilton2008); whereas slower ice velocities and rising water pressures reverse the freezing front and melt glacial sediment from the basal ice layer. Because ice velocities increase <50 km from the moraine and are very slow up flowline from there (Fig. 7), we consider the fast-flowing ice above the head of Law Glacier to be the most likely location of sediment entrainment. However, given the interior location of ice formation, we cannot definitively rule out the transport of some sediment from much deeper in the interior.
6. CONCLUSIONS
At Mount Achernar Moraine, in the Transantarctic Mountains, ice samples taken from beneath the sediment on the moraine have textures and stable isotope values consistent with sediment entrainment through open system regelation in basal ice that was at pressure melting point temperatures. On the surface of Law Glacier, where an emerging debris band is found outside of the moraine, there is less evidence of internal melting or regelation enrichment, leaving open the possibility that the sediment there was primarily or partially entrained through cold-based processes.
Once corrected by tracing the enrichment trend back to the meteoric waterline, the moraine ice has stable isotope values consistent with its formation during Pleistocene stadial phases in the interior of the polar plateau. This is true even in the portions of the moraine where sediment has only accumulated on the surface during the recent Holocene, which necessitates ice transport times >80 000 years and possibly much longer. The emerging debris band on Law Glacier is formed from interstadial age ice, which also must be sourced from the interior of the polar plateau. We consider an OIS 5 age for the Law Glacier ice and at least an OIS 6 age for the basal ice feeding the moraine to be the most plausible explanation of the findings.
The Mount Achernar Moraine consists of ice from the polar plateau that entrained sediment under warm-based conditions, most likely by regelation. It contrasts with sediment bands in an adjacent portion of Law Glacier, which may not have entrained sediment through warm-based processes. These results confirm models that show warm-based ice near the Transantarctic Mountains (e.g. Pattyn, Reference Pattyn2010) and suggest that blue ice moraines elsewhere on the continent may also be repositories of sediment and ice from the warm-based portions of the polar plateau. This suggests active erosion in the subglacial sediment source regions for these blue ice sites.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This work was supported by National Science Foundation Antarctic grants PLR-1443433 and PLR-1443213. The US Antarctic Program, Kenn Borek Air, Ltd., and field team members P. Braddock and K. Lindback are gratefully acknowledged for field and laboratory support. W. Propes performed the stable isotope analyses. K. Joy and C. Schrader collected and prepared the ANSMET ice water samples from 2012. Three thoughtful reviews and editorial handling by Michelle Koutnik and Hester Jiskoot improved the manuscript. This is LDEO contribution #8190.