EGU21-13787
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13787
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Self-consistency of the regolith hypothesis for the mid-Pleistocene Transition

Matthew Drew and Lev Tarasov
Matthew Drew and Lev Tarasov
  • Memorial University of Newfoundland, Physics & Physical Oceanography, St John's, Canada (mdrew@mun.ca)

Is the regolith hypothesis consistent with the physics of glacial removal of mechanically weak surface material? 

 

The  mid-Pleistocene transition (MPT) from small 40 kyr glacial cycles to large, abruptly terminating 100 kyr ones represents a major climate system reorganization for which a clear understanding is lacking. A leading mechanism for this transition is a stabilization of ice sheets due to a shift to higher friction substrate. The Pleistocene saw the removal of deformable regolith -- laying bare hard higher-friction bedrock that would help preserve regional ice during warm interstadials. This is the regolith hypothesis. 

 

The removal of regolith by Pleistocene ice sheets remains poorly constrained. To date, only models with a forced change in area of regolith cover or 1D flow line models with simplistic sediment transport have been used to probe the role of regolith in the MPT. It is therefore unclear if the appropriate amount of regolith removal can occur within the time-frame of the MPT.

 

To properly test the hypothesis, at least three components are required: capable model, observational constraint, and a probe of uncertainties. A capable model must explicitly represent relevant processes in a fully coupled self-consistent manner. We have therefore configured a state of the art 3D glacial systems model (GSM). The GSM incorporates a state-of-the-art fully coupled sediment production/transport model, subglacial hydrology, visco-elastic glacial isostatic adjustment, 3D thermomechanically coupled hybrid shallow ice/shallow shelf ice dynamics, and internal climate solution from an energy balance model. The model generates sediment by quarrying and abrasion, and both subglacial and englacial sediment transport. The subglacial hydrology model employs a linked-cavity system with a flux based switch to tunnel drainage, giving dynamic effective pressure needed for realistic sediment and sliding processes. The coupled model is driven only by prescribed atmospheric CO2 and orbitally derived insolation.

 

The required observational constraints include present-day regolith distribution and inferred Pleistocene ice volume from proxy records.

 

The final component is  a large ensemble of full Pleistocene simulations that probe both initial regolith distribution uncertainties and model parametric uncertainties. We present the results of such an ensemble, examining both rates of computed regolith removal and changes in ice volume cycling across the MPT interval.

How to cite: Drew, M. and Tarasov, L.: Self-consistency of the regolith hypothesis for the mid-Pleistocene Transition, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13787, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13787, 2021.