EGU25-3350, updated on 14 Mar 2025
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu25-3350
EGU General Assembly 2025
© Author(s) 2025. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Oral | Friday, 02 May, 11:06–11:16 (CEST)
 
Room D3
 Glacial Erosion Rates Since the Last Glacial Maximum for the Former Argentino Glacier and Present‐Day Upsala Glacier, Patagonia
Maria Beatrice Magnani and Anastasia Fedotova
Maria Beatrice Magnani and Anastasia Fedotova
  • Southern Methodist University, Department of Earth Sciences, Dallas, United States of America (mmagnani@smu.edu)

Recovering the patterns of glacial erosion over time is key to understanding feedbacks between climate and tectonic processes. Glacial erosion rates have been shown to systematically increase worldwide toward the present since the late Cenozoic, a behavior interpreted as the response of glaciers to a cooling and increasingly variable climate. However, the validity of this signal has been questioned, and suggested to be affected by the incompleteness of the sedimentary record, which can introduce a time dependent bias in the time averaged rates. In this study, we present new glacial erosion rates estimated from sediment accumulations in Lago Argentino, Patagonia, a proglacial basin with a nearly complete preserved sedimentary record. The erosion rates are estimated through the past 20,000 years and averaged over time intervals ranging from subdecadal to millennial, allowing us to explore erosion rate variability through time and within a glacial cycle. The data show that erosion rates have varied substantially, from 0.43 ± 0.12 to 82.38 ± 17.58 mm/yr, with no systematic increase (or decrease) through time. Rather, erosion occurs during discrete, intense events separated by times of quiescence. In addition, we find that glacial erosion rates have comparable magnitudes when averaged over similar time intervals. Our data show a power‐law increase in glacial erosion rates with decreasing averaging time interval, consistent with other observations globally. Given our observed intermittent character of glacial erosion, we attribute this increase to a time averaging bias, rather than to an escalation in magnitude of erosional pulses toward the present.

How to cite: Magnani, M. B. and Fedotova, A.:  Glacial Erosion Rates Since the Last Glacial Maximum for the Former Argentino Glacier and Present‐Day Upsala Glacier, Patagonia, EGU General Assembly 2025, Vienna, Austria, 27 Apr–2 May 2025, EGU25-3350, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu25-3350, 2025.