Resolving the paradox of conflicting glacial chronologies: Reconstructing the pattern of deglaciation of the Magellan cordilleran ice dome (53-54°S) during the Last glacial – interglacial transition

Bob McCulloch*, Michael Bentley, Derek Fabel, Hans Fernández-Navarro, Juan Luis Garcia, Andy Hein, Carla Huynh, Stewart S. R. Jamieson, Maria-Paz Lira, Christopher Lüthgens, Grace A. Nield, Manuel San Román, Eileen W. Tisdall

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract / Description of output

Raised shorelines and associated lacustrine sediments in the central Estrecho de Magallanes (Strait of Magellan) have been interpreted as products of cordilleran glaciers impounding a large proglacial lake and preventing drainage to the South Pacific and Southern Ocean during the Late glacial between c. 15.0 and 12.0 cal ka BP. However, a growing body of glacial geological evidence points towards an earlier retreat of the Magellan cordilleran ice dome, insufficient to dam lakes at that time. We critically re-evaluate the extant evidence for the c. 15.0–12.0 cal ka BP lake, here named ‘Lago Kawésqar’, and provide further sedimentological and chronological evidence for its existence. We also provide new cosmogenic surface nuclide dating of erratic and bedrock samples collected from extensive field campaigns that confirm the rapid and widespread retreat of the Magellan ice fields to the inner fjords of the Fuegian archipelago by c. 16.0 ka. To resolve the apparent paradox between these two lines of evidence we propose that glacial isostatic adjustment led to a topographic barrier to lake drainage rather than an ice dam. We use Glacial Isostatic Adjustment modelling to demonstrate that rapid isostatic recovery following the early deglaciation after c. 17.0 cal ka BP likely led to elevation of the present shallow south-western coastal margin of the Fuegian archipelago. Final drainage of Lago Kawésqar was probably caused by neotectonic subsidence of the same margin along the boundary of the South American – Scotia tectonic plates at c. 12.0 cal ka BP.
Original languageEnglish
Article number 108866
JournalQuaternary Science Reviews
Early online date6 Sept 2024
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 6 Sept 2024

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