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Creators/Authors contains: "Roth, Wendy"

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  1. We combine geomorphological and sediment core evidence to investigate phases of ice margin stability and instability during retreat of the Boothia Lancaster Ice Stream (BLIS) of the NE Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS) since the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). Sediment cores 2008029-059 PC and TWC (59CC) and 2013029-064 PC (64 PC) from Lancaster Sound and Baffin Bay, respectively, represent LGM through Holocene environments, including three Baffin Bay Detrital Carbonate (BBDC) events that have been thought to manifest calving events within Lancaster Sound. Previous mapping of glacigenic landforms shows that 64 PC lies within the LGM limit of the convergent BLIS and Tasiujaq Ice Stream (TIS) on the northeastern Baffin Island shelf, while 59CC terminates within subglacial/ice marginal sediments termed the Baffin Shelf Drift (BSD), capturing the history of BLIS retreat from 15.3 cal ka BP onward. In 64 PC, a basal sediment gravity flow deposit is overlain by dolomite-rich BBDC 2, which is re-interpreted here as a subglacial/ice marginal deposit and renamed GZ-BBDC. Both gravity flows are interpreted to have formed during retreat of the confluent TIS and BLIS from the LGM maximum extent. Overlying GZ-BBDC, in 64 PC, is a finely laminated lithofacies interpreted as an ice-shelf facies formed beneath the ice shelf fronting the confluent TIS and BLIS when it occupied a large LGM grounding zone wedge (GZW) in northern Baffin Bay. The ice-shelf facies indicates temporary stabilization of the conjoined TIS and BLIS. The overlying thin black glaciomarine diamicton records disintegration of the ice shelf and retreat of the TIS. Ice retreat over Cretaceous and younger bedrock into Lancaster Sound is recorded by dark brown diamicton and glaciomarine sediments in 59CC. The overlying tan, detrital carbonate-rich glaciomarine diamicton, BBDC 1 in 59 PC, manifests calving retreat of the BLIS onto the Paleozoic carbonate bedrock within Lancaster Sound by 15 cal ka BP. A slightly later onset of BBDC 1 in 64 PC, of ca.14.5 cal ka BP, points to the influence of local conditions such as sea ice and local iceberg calving on the distribution of IRD off of Pond Inlet. The pause in ice rafting and detrital carbonate deposition between BBDC 1 and BBDC 0 within the Younger Dryas chron likely results from BLIS readvance to Devon Island and its stabilization there until 11.6 cal ka BP. BLIS retreat into Prince Regent Inlet marks the onset of BBDC 0. These new results indicate multiple periods of instability of the BLIS, which are responsible for BBDC events identified throughout Baffin Bay. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available June 1, 2026
  2. ABSTRACT Glacial marine sediment deposition varies both spatially and temporally, but nearly all studies evaluate down-core (∼ time) variations in sediment variables with little consideration for across core variability, or even the consistency of a data set over distance scales of 1 to 1000 m. Grain size and quantitative X-ray diffraction (qXRD) methods require only ≤ 1 g of sediment and thus analyses assume that the identification of coarse sand (i.e., ice-rafted debris) and sediment mineral composition are representative of the depth intervals. This assumption was tested for grain size and mineral weight % on core MD99-2317, off East Greenland. Samples were taken from two sections of the core that had contrasting coarse-sand content. A total of fourteen samples were taken consisting of seven (vertical) and two (horizontal) samples, with five replicates per sample for qXRD analyses and ∼ 10 to 20 replicates for grain size. They had an average dry weight of 10.5 ± 0.5 g and are compared with two previous sets of sediment samples that averaged 54.1 ± 18.9 g and 20.77 ± 5.8 g dry weight. The results indicated some significant differences between the pairs of samples for grain-size parameters (mean sortable silt, and median grain size) but little difference in the estimates of mineral weight percentages. Out of 84 paired mineral and grain-size comparisons only 17 were significantly different at p = < 0.05 in the post-hoc Scheffe test, all of which were linked to grain-size attributes. 
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