Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-2pzkn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-01T19:54:08.169Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Glaciation, erosion and the evolution of the Transantarctic Mountains, Antarctica

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Andrew Kerr
Affiliation:
Department of Geography, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 9XP, Scotland
Alan Gilchrist
Affiliation:
Costal Mountain Consultants, 3504 Gorden Drive, Terrace, BC V8G 5P5, Canada
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Modelling studies of the tectonic evolution of the Transantarctic Mountains in Antarctica have drawn differing conclusions as to the primary mechanisms involved. None has considered the role of the East Antarctic ice sheet in detail. We use a denudation—flexural model to examine the isostatic response of the continental margin to glacial erosion to determine whether glacial processes have played a role in forcing mountain uplift.

The conclusion is that, although there are insufficient data formally to delimit the role of glacial erosion, available geophysical and geomorphological data are not inconsistent with the results of the differential denudation model, providing certain conditions are met. These results indicate that the current topography of the Transantarctic Mountains can be simulated, in part, from the isostatic response of the lithosphere to glacial erosion. The short wavelength and high amplitude of the Transantarctic Mountains do not require a low flexural rigidity in the unrated lithosphere, provided there is a fast escarpment retreat from the rift hinge, high escarpment denudation rates and a large differential in denudation between the coastal zone and the interior.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1996

Introduction

Debate coupling recent uplift of the Transantarctic Mountains with late Cenozoic instability of the East Antarctic ice sheet (Behrendt and Cooper, 1991) has focused attention on mechanisms which generate the uplifted flanks of rifted continental margins. Modelling studies of the Transantarctic Mountains (Drewry, 1983; Stern and ten Brink, 1989; ten Brink and Stern, 1992; Bott and Stern, 1992; Beek and others, 1994) have drawn different conclusions as to the principal factors concerned, primarily because of their conflicting interpretations of the available geophysical and geomorphic data. Mechanisms proposed for uplift include thermal buoyancy due to lithospheric stretching (ten Brink and others, 1993), flexural uplift as a result of lithospheric necking (Beek and others, 1994) and the Vening Meinesz mechanism (Stern and ten Brink, 1989). Although all consider erosion to be important, none has considered the function of the ice sheet in detail. It remains unclear as to the extent to which the East Antarctic ice sheet has influenced the mechanisms driving the rifted continental margin uplift over geological time-scales.

The two aspects of glaciation which can influence regional tectonics are the ice load on the lithosphere and patterns of glacial erosion. Their influence is coupled to the time-scales over which they operate and, in the latter case, the effectiveness with which denudation occurs. Glacial isostatic loading is more transitory, while modifying regional geomorphological processes can lead to permanent change, though they may of course be linked since the warping of the lithosphere by the ice sheet affects patterns of denudation over geological time-scales.

Here, we will examine one aspect of the problem, which concerns the isostatic response of the continental margin to glacial erosion, to determine whether glacial processes have played a role in forcing mountain uplift. The history of glaciation in East Antarctica is, however, a matter of debate. Offshore seismic data suggest that glaciation was occurring in the Transantarctic Mountains at least as far back as the Oligocene (Anderson and Bartek, 1992). Subsequently, the classical view holds that the ice sheet has been stable and in a form similar to that of today for over 12 Ma, since the development of a polar climate sometime after the opening of Drake Passage between South America and Antarctica during the Miocene (Sugden and others, 1993). The second, and currently more popular, view holds that the ice sheet has fluctuated dramatically throughout its existence until the end of the Pliocene (~3 Ma), since when a full polar climate has existed (Wilson, 1995).

Regardless of the outcome of this debate, the implication is that glacial processes have been operating in the Transantarctic Mountains for much of the Cenozoic, since rifting, uplift and denudation began ~55–60 Ma (Fitzgerald, 1992). However, quantifying glacial erosion over millions of years and on regional scales is not possible using current process models of ice sheets. In addition, although it is possible to assert qualitatively that certain climatic conditions are more conducive to higher rates of glacial erosion, the data are insufficiently constrained to provide a detailed history of climatic fluctuations throughout the Cenozoic. Therefore, in an attempt to explore the geomorphological consequence of glaciation we apply the denudational–flexural model of Gilchrist and Summerfield (1990). This was developed to assess large-scale landscape evolution following supercontinent break-up and links denudation and isostasy across high-elevation, passive continental margins. These are characterized by dissected coastal zones with significant relief rising to an escarpment inland separating the coastal zone from the hinterland (Gilchrist and Summerfield, 1994). Such margins are similar to the current morphology and tectonic selling of the Transantarctic Mountains (Tessensohn and Worner, 1991).

The Model

The model is taken from Gilchrist and Summerfield (1990) and consists of two parts: a dual-terrain model where differential rates of denudation across the continental margin are represented as regions of high and low relief separated by a moving boundary (Fig. 1) and a flexural model, which calculates the isostatic response to denudational unloading assuming a thin elastic plate of constant thickness overlying an inviscid fluid according to the equation

where ω is the vertical flexure, D is the flexural rigidity, ρm is the mantle density, ρi is the density of the flexure infill (air), g is the acceleration due to gravity, l(x) is the denudational load as a function of x and x is the distance from the continental margin. (Nadai, 1963). The flexural rigidity is given by

Fig. 1. A schematic diagram outlining the geometry of the model. Parameters are required for the rate of escarpment retreat and the denudation in the coastal zone, the hinterland and on the escarpment.

rigidity is given by

where E is Young’s modulus, T e is the effective elastic thickness of the lithosphere and υ is Poisson’s ratio. Vertical flexure is calculated in the wave-number domain from
where R(k) is the isostatic response function, so
and W(k) and L(k) are the Fourier transforms of w(x) and l(x), and k is the wave number given by k = 2π/λ where λ is the wavelength. This acts as a low-pass filter to an applied load, so the spatial resolution of the denudational model is not critical in determining the isostatic response to denudation provided that deviations are relatively minor. The model parameters, which determine the flexural response to unloading, are the effective elastic thickness of the lithosphere in both the rifted and unrifted regions (Gilchrist and Summerfield, 1990).

The denudational model consists of four parameters which quantify the rate at which the escarpment retreats from the coast, and the rates of denudation in the coastal zone, in the interior and on the escarpment. It utilizes empirical estimates of long-term denudation which can be constrained independently using apatite fission-track data. The modelling should, therefore, be seen in the context of a parameter study to examine the role of glacial erosion on the dynamics of a passive margin; it does not seek to simulate all the relevant processes involved with tectonic uplift.

In addition, the model calculates the effect of loading sediments offshore on the margin morphology, using borehole data to constrain seismic interpretations of sediment age.

Data Constraints

Constraining the mechanisms which caused uplift of the Transantarctic Mountains depends critically on the use of the appropriate data. The inputs required for the model comprise denudation rates and flexural rigidities of the lithosphere. These latter parameters determine the amplitude and wavelength of uplift foe a given load. Published values vary widely; modelling studies of the Transantarctic Mountains have used values of equivalent elastic thickness of 110 km dropping to 5 km at the continental margin (Stern and ten Brink, 1989; ten Brink and Stern, 1992), 100 km to 12.5 km (Bott and Stern, 1992), and > 40–50 km dropping to 20 km at the margin (Beek and others, 1994). The latter authors noted that the higher values were obtained because the topographic deflection was modelled solely as a line load acting at the margin. Instead, they used values based on coherence studies of topography and Bouguer gravity anomalies in analogous regions. In the first instance, we will use these latter figures.

The remaining inputs are rates of denudation across the continental escarpment which are quantified by four model parameters. Unfortunately, quantitative measures of the effectiveness of glacial denudation produce widely varying rates. Instead, more indirect methods are used. These are exemplified by Bell and Laine (1985), who used offshore seismic reflection data to argue that an equivalent of 120 m of rock had been eroded from the Laurentide region during the Quaternary; Hall and Sugden (1987), who provided evidence of the selectivity of glacial denudation from glacial and pre-glacial land forms; and Wellman and Tingey (1981), who calculated a rate of 50 m Ma−1 for Antarctica from isostatic considerations. Clearly, all these indirect methods are limited by the constraints of extrapolating data over wide spatial scales.

As an upper estimate, we take the highest value, that of 50 m Ma−1, for the coastal-zone denudation rate and a proportionately smaller value for the interior, encapsulating the myriad of processes leading to lower denudation rates in colder, less maritime regions, The lack of denudation data for areas other than the coastal zones and escarpments necessarily limits modelling to numerical exploration of the parameter space.

The simplest parameter to calculate is the escarpment retreat rate, since the maximum elevation of the Transantarctic Mountains escarpment in the Dry Valley region lies about 80 km from the coast, which is taken to be the rift hinge. Since rifting and denudation began ~55–60 Ma, this provides a mean rate of escarpment retreat, though in practice retreat rates would vary markedly with climatic and glacial conditions.

These parameters, coupled to a high denudation rate on the escarpment, determine the volume of sediment eroded through time. This combined figure is tightly constrained by apatite fission-track data which provide an estimate of total denudation, assuming a reasonable geothermal model (Gleadow and Fitzgerald, 1987; Fitzgerald, 1992). In the Dry Valleys sector of the Transantarctic Mountains, denudation has removed a wedge of material of more than 5 km near the coast reducing to 1 km and 75 km inland.

The remaining input is the initial topography. Gleadow and Fitzgerald (1987) suggested a plateau elevation of 500m, a value which has attained axiomatic status though it is poorly constrained, while Sugden and others (1995) suggested an equally poorly constrained 1200 m. We explore the implications of both these initial elevations, plus a third which has a block at the continental margin of 1200 m elevation with the hinterland at an elevation of 500 m, since there was tectonic uplift and denudation in the early Cretaceous (Fitzgerald, 1992).

Comparison with the gross morphology of the present continental margin is complicated by the existence of the ice sheet. Assumptions concerning the flexural rigidity of the lithosphere will implicitly determine the effect of the ice sheet. Using a broken, variable rigidity model. Stern and ten Brink (1989) calculated the ice load alone depresses the lithosphere by over 800 m about 500 km inland from the Transantarctic Mountains but has only a small effect at the coast. This differs from the analysis by Drewry (1983), who suggested subsidence in the Transantarctic Mountains. The difference reflects the use of a continuous, constant rigidity, thin elastic-plate model by Drewry. To curtail these problems, the current topography of the Transantarctic Mountains is shown and graded into an artificial inland plateau with an altitude of 500 m, simply for use as a reference level.

Table 1. The input parameters to the model

Sensitivity Experiments

The eight inputs to the model are shown in Table 1. Figure 2 shows the evolution of the continental margin and the development of a mountain escarpment, formed only by the flexural response of the lithosphere to the denudational unloading across the margin. The final shape of the topography is determined by the initial topography and the interplay of the various components of denudation. The maximum elevation of the escarpment, here at 2400 m after 60 Ma, depends on the upward lithospheric flexure coupled with the accumulative denudation. The lithospheric flexure is shown in Figure 3, indicating the downward flexure on the rifted side of the hinge and upward flexure to a maximum elevation of over 1700 m after 60 Ma on the continental side of the hinge. Similarly, the accumulative denudation is shown in Figure 4, indicating the removal of a wedge of material about 5 km thick at the rift hinge, reducing to a negligible thickness about 100 km inland. The shape of this wedge, which is constrained by fission-track data, can be manipulated by varying the rates of denudation across the continental margin. This puts tight constraints on the relative ratios of denudation across the margin but cannot by itself determine absolute rates. Finally, Figure 5 shows a comparison of the modelled topography with the present-day topographic profile of the Transantarctic Mountains in the Dry Valleys region. The present-day profile has higher relief though the wavelength of flexure is similar.

Fig. 2. The evolution of the continental margin and the development of a mountain escarpment resulting from a combination of lithospheric flexure and accumulative denudation, from 60 Ma to the present (0 Ma).

Fig. 3. The evolution of the lithospheric flexure caused by denudational unloading at the continental margin, from 60 Ma to the present (0 Ma).

The shape of the modelled topographic profile depends on the value of the denudational components. Reducing the interior denudation to zero, as an extreme example, produces a higher topographic profile by about 100 m due to the coupled effect of reduced denudation and reduced flexural upwarping. Raising the interior denudation lowers the final topographic profile, because of increased denudation, despite increased flexural upwarping. If the interior denudation rate increases, the accumulative denudation profile becomes increasingly flattened until the interior rate exceeds the coastal zone rate, at which point the wedge profile narrows towards the coast. It follows that the conditions required to reproduce the fission-track data are strong differential rates of denudation across the continental margin. The highest topographic profiles are obtained when interior denudation rates approach zero.

Fig. 4. The evolution of the accumulative denudation across the continental margin, which is constrained by fission-track data, from 60 Ma to the present (0 Ma).

Fig. 5. A comparison between the modelled topography and a schematic profile of the present Transantarctic Mountains in the Dry Valleys area. Of note are the maximum elevation of the topography and the flexural wavelength rather than the quality of fit.

The coastal-zone denudation rate is sufficiently high to reduce the topography to sea level. If the coastal-zone denudation rate is lowered, coastal hills form and their shape is determined by the rate of escarpment retreat. This escarpment-retreat rate plays a crucial role on the altitude and wavelength of the topography. Reducing the retreat rate increases the wavelength of flexure and reduces the altitude of the topography, while increasing it achieves the opposite effect. However, an excessively high retreat rate leads to an overly narrow flexural wavelength and too much denudation at the rift hinge. The latter effect can be reduced by lowering the escarpment denudation and delicate interplay between these two parameters can lead to a topographic profile with an identical flexural wavelength to the present topography, and with a denudation profile which is within the constraints of the apatite fission-track data.

Varying the flexural rigidity of the unrifted lithosphere also varies the flexural wavelength and amplitude. Increasing it to an effective elastic thickness of 60 km reduces the flexural upwarp and the denudation, and the combined result is a reduction in the maximum topographic elevation. Reducing the flexural rigidity to 20 km leads to increased denudation, flexural upwarping and a rise in the maximum topographic elevation. Meanwhile, varying the rifted lithosphere by the same magnitude produces only minor variations in denudation, lithospheric flexure and topography.

The effect of varying each of six parameters, four denudational and two flexural, on maximum elevation is shown in Table 2. In general, the maximum elevation is linked to the flexural wavelength; smaller elevations equate to longer wavelengths.

Table 2. The effect of varying the input parameters by ± 50% on the maximum elevation of the accumulative denudation, the lithospheric flexure and the topography. This is one of two possible measures, the second being the flexural wavelength: qualitatively, the results are similar

Applying the same sensitivity tests with an initial topographic elevation of 500 m produces qualitatively similar results, though there is a larger mismatch between the final topographic profile and the current topography. Using an initial topography consisting of a coastal block at an elevation of 1200 m and the hinterland at 500 m results in a much better fit between modelled and current topographic profiles (Figure 6).

Fig. 6. A comparison between the modelled topography, assuming different initial topographic elevations, and a schematic profile of the present Transantarctic Mountains in the Dry Valleys area. An initial topographic elevation of 1200 m leads to a high hinterland; an initial elevation of 500 m leads to a low mountain escarpment; an initial elevation of 1200 m at the coast and 500 m in the hinterland produces a relatively good fit. Since the initial elevation is unknown, the implication is that we cannot delimit the role of differential denudation in forcing mountain uplift.

Implications for the Transantarctic Mountains

The necessary conditions for producing a flexural wavelength which is comparable to the present Transantarctic Mountains are either a low effective elastic thickness in the unrifted continental lithosphere or a rapid escarpment retreat rate. The former is unlikely, while evidence indicates that the latter has occurred.

The necessary conditions required to satisfy the apatite fission-track data, that between 5 and 6 km of denudation occurred near the rift hinge reducing to 1 km at 75 km, are a large escarpment-denudation rate and a high differential-denudation ratio between the interior and coastal zones.

To produce modelled topographic profiles of a comparable magnitude to the Transantarctic Mountains requires a high initial elevation and low absolute rates of denudation in the interior.

Sediment-loading offshore lowers the topographic profile on land, since the lithosphere is modelled as a continuous plate.

Discussion and Conclusions

This paper explores the response of a high-elevation passive margin to differential denudation. By utilizing available data pertaining to long-term glacial erosion, we show that glaciation can be an important process in reorganizing lithospheric loading over geological time-scales. In the Transantarctic Mountains, three observations are pivotal. First, offshore seismic interpretations suggest that glacial processes have been operating in the Transantarctic Mountains since at least the Oligocene. Secondly, fission-track data indicate a substantial wedge of material has been eroded from the continental rift flank and, finally, high surface elevations imply surface uplift. These observations are not inconsistent with the results of the differential-denudation model, provided specific conditions exist. These include a fast escarpment-retreat rate, though not necessarily a low flexural rigidity in the unrifted lithosphere, a high rate of denudation on the escarpment and a large differential between rates of denudation at the coast and in the interior. Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, the final topography is highly dependent on the elevation of the initial topography, which is poorly constrained.

The limitations of such an approach stem from the necessarily schematic model. While it is qualitatively reasonable to assume that much larger quantities of erosion take place on an escarpment front than in coastal regions or in the more continental and elevated hinterland, it is not clear that this can be translated into simple quantitative estimates of long-term denudation rates. In addition, the implications of sediment-filled grabens such as the Victoria Basin are not properly explored. Thus, we do not assert that glacial processes are crucial in driving rift-flank uplift but simply note that the available data are not inconsistent with such ideas.

At present, there are insufficient data to delimit the role of glacial erosional processes in forcing surface uplift in the Transantarctic Mountains and this paper is necessarily speculative. However, the flexural response of the lithosphere to such changes in loading, whether glacial or otherwise, appears to be one of the mechanisms capable of forcing tectonic uplift in the Transantarctic Mountains during the Cenozoic.

Acknowledgements

This research was supported by the U.K. Natural Environment Research Council, grant GR3/9128. The authors wish to thank M. Summerfield for helpful suggestions regarding the manuscript.

References

Anderson, J. B. and Bartek, L. R.. 1992. Cenozoic glacial history of the Ross Sea revealed by intermediate resolution seismic reflection data combined with drill site information. In Kennett, J. P. and Warnke, D. A., eds. The Antarctic paleoenvironment: a perspective on global change. Part 1. Washington, DC, American Geophysical Union, 5665. (Antarctic Research Series 56.)Google Scholar
Beek, P. van der, Cloetingh, S. and Andriessen, P.. 1994. Mechanisms of extensional basin formation and vertical motions at rift flanks: constraints from tectonic modelling and fission track thermo-chronology. Earth Planet Sci. Lett., 121, 417433.Google Scholar
Behrendt, J. C. and Cooper, A. K.. 1991. Evidence of rapid Cenozoic uplift of the shoulder escarpment of the Cenozoic West Antarctic rift system and a speculation on possible climate forcing, Geology, 19(4), 315319.2.3.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bell, M. and Laine, E.P.. 1985. Erosion of the Laurentide region of North America by glacial and glaciofluvial processes. Quat. Res., 23(2), 154174.Google Scholar
Bott, M. H.P. and Stern, T. A.. 1992. Finite element analysis of the Transantarctic Mountain uplift and coeval subsidence in the Ross Embayment. Tectonophysics, 201(34), 341356.Google Scholar
Drewry, D.J., ed. 1983. Antarctica: glacialogical and geophysical folio. Cambridge, Scott Polar Research Institute.Google Scholar
Fitzgerald, P. G. 1992. The Transantarctic Mountains of southern Victoria Land: the application of apatite fission track analysis to a rift shoulder uplift. Tectonics, 11(3), 634662.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gilchrist, A. R. and Summerfield, M. A.. 1990. Differential denudation and flexural isostacy in formation of rifted margin upwarps. Nature, 346(6286), 739712.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gilchrist, A. R. and Summerfield, M. A.. 1994. Tectonic models of passive margin evolution and their implications for theories of long-term landscape development. In Kirkby, M. J., ed. Process models and theoretical geomorphology. New York, etc., John Wiley and Sons, 5584.Google Scholar
Gleadow, A. J.W. and Fitzgerald, P. G.. 1987. Uplift history and structure of the Transantarctic Mountains; new evidence from fission track dating of basement apatites In the Dry Valleys area, southern Victoria Land. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett., 82(12), 114.Google Scholar
Hall, A. M. and Sugden, D. E.. 1987. Limited modifications of mid-latitude landscapes by ice sheets: the case of northeast Scotland. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms, 12(5), 531542.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nadai, A. 1963. Theory of flow and fracture of solids, First edition. New York, McGraw-Hill.Google Scholar
Stern, T. A. and ten, U. S. Brink. 1989. Flexural uplift of the Transantarctic Mountains. J. Geophys. Res., 94(B8), 10, 31510, 330.Google Scholar
Sugden, D.K., Marchant, D. R. and Denton, G. H.. 1993. The case for a stable East Antarctic ice sheet: the background. Geogr. Ann., 75A(4), 151154.Google Scholar
Sugden, D.E., Denton, G. H. and Marchant, D. R.. 1965, Landscape evolution of the Dry Valleys, Transantarctic Mountains: tectonic implications. J. Geophys. Res., 100(B7), 99499967.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ten Brink, U. S., Bannister, S., Beaudoin, B. C. and Stern, T. A.. 1993. Geophysical investigations of the tectonic boundary between East and West Antarctica. Science, 261(5117), 4550.Google Scholar
Ten Brink, U. and Stern, T.. 1992. Rift flank uplifts and hinterland basins: comparison of the Transantarctic Mountains with the Great Escarpment of southern Africa, J. Geophys. Res., 97(B1), 569585.Google Scholar
Tessensohn, F. and Worner, G.. 1991. The Ross Sea rift system: structure, evolution and analogues. In Thomson, M. R. V., Crane, J. A. and Thomson, J. W., eds. Geological evolution of Antarctica. New York, etc., Cambridge University Press, 273277.Google Scholar
Wellman, P. and Tingey, R.J.. 1981. Glaciation, erosion and uplift over part of East Antarctica. Nature, 291(5811) 142144.Google Scholar
Wilson, G. S. 1995. The Neogene East Antarctic ice sheet: a dynamic or stable feature? Quat. Sci. Rev., 14, 101123.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Fig. 1. A schematic diagram outlining the geometry of the model. Parameters are required for the rate of escarpment retreat and the denudation in the coastal zone, the hinterland and on the escarpment.

Figure 1

Table 1. The input parameters to the model

Figure 2

Fig. 2. The evolution of the continental margin and the development of a mountain escarpment resulting from a combination of lithospheric flexure and accumulative denudation, from 60 Ma to the present (0 Ma).

Figure 3

Fig. 3. The evolution of the lithospheric flexure caused by denudational unloading at the continental margin, from 60 Ma to the present (0 Ma).

Figure 4

Fig. 4. The evolution of the accumulative denudation across the continental margin, which is constrained by fission-track data, from 60 Ma to the present (0 Ma).

Figure 5

Fig. 5. A comparison between the modelled topography and a schematic profile of the present Transantarctic Mountains in the Dry Valleys area. Of note are the maximum elevation of the topography and the flexural wavelength rather than the quality of fit.

Figure 6

Table 2. The effect of varying the input parameters by ± 50% on the maximum elevation of the accumulative denudation, the lithospheric flexure and the topography. This is one of two possible measures, the second being the flexural wavelength: qualitatively, the results are similar

Figure 7

Fig. 6. A comparison between the modelled topography, assuming different initial topographic elevations, and a schematic profile of the present Transantarctic Mountains in the Dry Valleys area. An initial topographic elevation of 1200 m leads to a high hinterland; an initial elevation of 500 m leads to a low mountain escarpment; an initial elevation of 1200 m at the coast and 500 m in the hinterland produces a relatively good fit. Since the initial elevation is unknown, the implication is that we cannot delimit the role of differential denudation in forcing mountain uplift.