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Timing of iceberg scours and massive ice-rafting events in the subtropical North Atlantic

July 16, 2021

High resolution seafloor mapping shows extraordinary evidence that massive (>300 m thick) icebergs once drifted >5,000 km south along the eastern United States, with >700 iceberg scours now identified south of Cape Hatteras. Here we report on sediment cores collected from several buried scours that show multiple plow marks align with Heinrich Event 3 (H3), ~31,000 years ago. Numerical glacial iceberg simulations indicate that the transport of icebergs to these sites occurs during massive, but short-lived, periods of elevated meltwater discharge. Transport of icebergs to the subtropics, away from deep water formation sites, may explain why H3 was associated with only a modest increase in ice-rafting across the subpolar North Atlantic, and implies a complex relationship between freshwater forcing and climate change. Stratigraphy from subbottom data across the scour marks shows there are additional features that are both older and younger, and may align with other periods of elevated meltwater discharge.

Publication Year 2021
Title Timing of iceberg scours and massive ice-rafting events in the subtropical North Atlantic
DOI 10.1038/s41467-021-23924-0
Authors Alan Condron, Jenna C. Hill
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Nature Communications
Index ID 70222137
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Pacific Coastal and Marine Science Center