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Marine isotope stage 4 (71–57 ka) on the Western European margin: Insights to the drainage and dynamics of the Western European ice sheet
Toucanne, S.; Rodrigues, T.; Menot, G.; Soulet, G.; Cheron, S.; Billy, I.; Eynaud, F.; Antoine, P.; Sinninghe Damsté, J.S.; Bard, E.; Sanchez Goñi, M.F. (2023). Marine isotope stage 4 (71–57 ka) on the Western European margin: Insights to the drainage and dynamics of the Western European ice sheet. Global Planet. Change 229: 104221. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2023.104221
In: Global and Planetary Change. Elsevier: Amsterdam; New York; Oxford; Tokyo. ISSN 0921-8181; e-ISSN 1872-6364, more
Peer reviewed article  

Available in  Authors 
    NIOZ: NIOZ files 393652

Author keywords
    European Ice Sheet; Marine Isotope Stage 4; Climate dynamics; Northeast Atlantic; Bay of Biscay; Heinrich stadials; Quaternary; Deep-sea cores

Authors  Top 
  • Toucanne, S.
  • Rodrigues, T.
  • Menot, G.
  • Soulet, G.
  • Cheron, S.
  • Billy, I.
  • Eynaud, F.
  • Antoine, P.
  • Sinninghe Damsté, J.S., more
  • Bard, E.
  • Sanchez Goñi, M.F.

Abstract
    Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 4 (ca. 71–57 ka; within the Middle Weichselian Substage) is considered a significant Pleistocene glaciation, but it remains poorly constrained in comparison to that of the Late Weichselian Last Glacial Maximum (LGM; ca. 29–19 ka, during MIS 2), or even the Late Saalian MIS 6 (ca. 190–130 ka). Most MIS 4 glacial landforms in Europe were erased by the more extensive LGM ice advance, precluding a robust reconstruction of its extent and dynamic through time. Marine sedimentary archives, in preserving the source-to-sink sediment transfer signals of ice-sheet and glacier processes, help to bridge this gap. Here, the signals west of the European Ice Sheet (EIS) are tracked for MIS 4 from the deep Bay of Biscay (NE Atlantic), which was the outlet for Fennoscandian Ice Sheet (FIS) sediment-laden meltwater during extensive glaciations, specifically when the British-Irish Ice Sheet (BIIS) and the FIS coalesced into the North Sea (as during MIS 6 and the LGM). Sedimentological, geochemical, and mineralogical proxies reveal the absence of FIS-derived material in Bay of Biscay sediment throughout MIS 4, which indicates that FIS meltwater and huge river systems from the North European Plain never drained into the Bay of Biscay at that time. This suggests that contrary to MIS 6 and the LGM, the BIIS and FIS were not likely large enough to coalesce and form a (grounded) ice bridge onto the North Sea, thus confirming geomorphic evidence for a significant, but relatively limited, glaciation in Europe during MIS 4.Closer to the Bay of Biscay, ice-marginal fluctuations of the BIIS are identified in the Celtic-Irish Sea region from the deep-sea record. More specifically, our findings suggest an early retreat of the Irish Sea Ice Stream as soon as ca. 68–65 ka, a few millennia before the demise of the EIS, and the Northern Hemisphere ice sheets as a whole, during Heinrich Stadial (HS) 6. This pattern is similar to that already recorded during MIS 2. Finally, this study reveals that the MIS 4 period in Western Europe corresponds, as for MIS 2, to a complex combination of general ice advance interspersed by preliminary-to-final EIS demises highlighted by HS conditions.

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