1. Introduction
Climate affects the volume and extent of the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS); yet our knowledge of climate's influence on Pleistocene history and environmental conditions prevailing during ice-sheet build-up remains fragmentary (e.g. Dutton and others, Reference Dutton2015; Westerhold and others, Reference Westerhold2020). It is critical to better understand the sensitivity of the GrIS, and its ecosystems relative to different climate states as human-induced climate change increases in magnitude and duration. Our understanding of GrIS past history mostly relies on indirect archives, such as marine sediments (Larsen and others, Reference Larsen1994; de Vernal and Hillaire-Marcel, Reference de Vernal and Hillaire-Marcel2008; Bierman and others, Reference Bierman, Shakun, Corbett, Zimmerman and Rood2016; Tripati and Darby, Reference Tripati and Darby2018; Christ and others, Reference Christ2020) or seismic surveys (e.g. Knutz and others, Reference Knutz2019) that allow insights about GrIS behavior over millions of years (Tripati and Darby, Reference Tripati and Darby2018). Terrestrial archives are rare and discontinuous, including sediment deposits (e.g. Funder and others, Reference Funder2001; Bennike and others, Reference Bennike2010; Corbett and others, Reference Corbett2021; Larsen and others, Reference Larsen2021), ice-core basal ice layer (BIL) debris and bedrock (e.g. Souchez and others, Reference Souchez1994; Verbeke and others, Reference Verbeke, Lorrain, Johnsen and Tison2002; Willerslev and others, Reference Willerslev2007; Bender and others, Reference Bender, Burgess, Alley, Barnett and Clow2010; Bierman and others, Reference Bierman, Shakun, Corbett, Zimmerman and Rood2016; Goossens and others, Reference Goossens2016; Schaefer and others, Reference Schaefer2016; Yau and others, Reference Yau, Bender, Blunier and Jouzel2016a, Reference Yau, Bender, Robinson and Brook2016b; Christ and others, Reference Christ2021). Evidence of past ecosystems comes from pollen, spores or fossils found in terrestrial or marine sediments (e.g. de Vernal and Mudie, Reference de Vernal and Mudie1989; Funder and others, Reference Funder2001; Bennike and others, Reference Bennike2010) but also from the study of debris in the ice-core BIL (e.g. Willerslev and others, Reference Willerslev2007; Christ and others, Reference Christ2021).
BIL describes the bottom layer of the ice sequence present at the interface with underlying till and/or bedrock. These ice layers often bear debris from beneath the ice sheet. Majority of basal ice is thought to originate from the surface, and had been further diagenetically modified by processes operating at the bed (Knight, Reference Knight1997). Some, however, like at the GRIP location, suggest a pre-ice-sheet origin, from local ice fields or permafrost (Souchez and others, Reference Souchez1994; Tison and others, Reference Tison1998). The BIL material constitutes a unique and direct archive of sediments from Greenland's interior and represents a promising, yet under-utilized, archive of climate information. It is a scarce, but limited, continental archive that holds information about GrIS past behavior (Weis and others, Reference Weis, Demaiffe, Souchez, Gow and Meese1997; Bierman and others, Reference Bierman2014; Schaefer and others, Reference Schaefer2016), Greenland's past ecosystems (Willerslev and others, Reference Willerslev2007; Christ and others, Reference Christ2021), sub-ice-sheet geology (Fountain and others, Reference Fountain, Usselman, Wooden and Langway1981; Weis and others, Reference Weis, Demaiffe, Souchez, Gow and Meese1997) and basal ice processes (Tison and others, Reference Tison, Petit, Barnola and Mahaney1993, Reference Tison, Thorsteinsson, Lorrain and Kipfstuhl1994, Reference Tison1998; Souchez and others, Reference Souchez1994; Souchez and others, Reference Souchez, Vandenschrick, Lorrain and Tison2000; Verbeke and others, Reference Verbeke, Lorrain, Johnsen and Tison2002; Souchez and others, Reference Souchez2006; de Angelis and others, Reference de Angelis, Tison, Morel-Fourcade and Susini2013; Goossens and others, Reference Goossens2016). The study of its structure and geochemistry is a key to understanding ice-sheet behavior, as well as subglacial erosion and deposition as it offers a window into processes occurring at the ice-sheet bed (Knight, Reference Knight1997).
Here, we examine the archive of BIL material from the NEEM ice core that was drilled in the north-western Greenland and is one of few GrIS cores that retrieved rock debris (Fig. 1). The structure and ice of the NEEM BIL were described and analyzed by Goossens and others (Reference Goossens2016), but the debris was not specifically studied beyond its grain size distribution. The goal of this study is to gather as much information as possible from the material contained in the NEEM BIL, allowing us to characterize the potential sub-ice-sheet geology of the area, to widen the amount of data available for Greenland BIL material, and allow comparison with other ice cores. To do so, we present morphologic–microscopic, chemical and isotopic analyses of recovered grains to characterize the nature, origin and transport history of the sediment encountered in the NEEM basal ice. Along with geochemical analyses of meteoric 10Be and organic nitrogen and carbon, this dataset assists with the identification and description of past ecosystems of the fluctuating glacial–interglacial paleoenvironment of northwestern Greenland. These new data are compared to those obtained from other Greenland deep ice core records (Willerslev and others, Reference Willerslev2007; Bierman and others, Reference Bierman2014; Schaefer and others, Reference Schaefer2016; Yau and others, Reference Yau, Bender, Robinson and Brook2016b; Christ and others, Reference Christ2021).
2. Background: previous work on Greenland basal ice debris from ice cores
Debris-rich material in the BILs of Greenland is available in only few cores (Fig. 1): Camp Century, GISP2, NEEM and, in much smaller proportion, in GRIP and Dye-3 (Fig. 1; Tison and others, Reference Tison2019). Only few studies have examined the BIL debris in Greenland ice cores to understand ice-sheet basal processes and Greenland subglacial geology.
Regarding subglacial processes, Whalley and Langway (Reference Whalley and Langway1980) analyzed quartz grains from the subglacial sediment of the Camp Century ice core using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) to characterize grain shape and various microtextures to assess grain transport. They distinguished two grain categories: angular grains resulting from glacial grinding and well-rounded grains produced by aeolian transport, likely prior to ice-sheet build-up. Petrologic geochemical analyses of several clasts from the Camp Century subglacial sediment allowed documentation of the subglacial geology of northwestern Greenland (Fountain and others, Reference Fountain, Usselman, Wooden and Langway1981). The nature of the basal ice in the NEEM core has been well described by Goossens and others (Reference Goossens2016), but information is still lacking about the nature and morphological characteristics of the debris. Significant spatial variability of the neodymium (εNd) and strontium (87Sr/86Sr) isotopic signatures was documented in Greenland from the analysis of bedrocks cropping out at the periphery of Greenland (Collerson and others, Reference Collerson, McCulloch and Nutman1989; Weis and others, Reference Weis, Demaiffe, Souchez, Gow and Meese1997), but also by analyzing moraines, cryoconites and dust sources from local Greenland soils (Nagatsuka and others, Reference Nagatsuka2016; Simonsen and others, Reference Simonsen2019). εNd and (87Sr/86Sr) of silt and clay particles from BIL of GISP2 and GRIP (Central Greenland) allowed Weis and others (Reference Weis, Demaiffe, Souchez, Gow and Meese1997) to identify the origin of the basal material in these two ice cores (Fig. 1b): local granitic bedrock for BIL sediments in GISP2, and subglacial till located above the GISP2 bedrock for BIL sediments in GRIP. These observations support the idea that lateral transport of basal sediment may have occurred, by lateral ice motion. Other ɛNd and (87Sr/86Sr) data from the upper Holocene and Pleistocene ice of Central Greenland suggested that the dust recorded in the upper ice section is very different from the local sources and was probably transported from Asian deserts (Bory and others, Reference Bory, Biscaye and Grousset2003a, Reference Bory, Biscaye, Piotrowski and Steffensen2003b). However, the ɛNd and (87Sr/86Sr) isotopic composition of the NEEM basal debris was still unknown.
Other investigations of ice core basal materials yield information about the past behavior and stability of the GrIS. In the south-central ice core DYE-3 and in GRIP (see Fig. 1 for locations), using DNA and amino acids of biomolecules from basal ice, Willerslev and others (Reference Willerslev2007) reconstructed the past ecosystem of Greenland. Those locations were probably forested and hosted insect colonies some time before the Last Interglacial (~130–116 ka). Analyzing cosmogenic atmospherically produced beryllium-10 (meteoric 10Be), organic carbon and total nitrogen of sediments from the BIL of GISP2, Bierman and others (Reference Bierman2014) suggested the long-term, multimillion year-long preservation of paleosols, likely from boreal regions and cryoturbated tundra, at the center of the GIS, suggesting a stability of the ice sheet and low subglacial erosion rates during most of the Pleistocene. These authors also proposed that the Greenland Summit (i.e. at location of GISP2) was continuously covered by ice over the Quaternary. Based on cosmogenic in situ produced beryllium-10 (10Be) and aluminium-26 (26Al) measured in the bedrock beneath the GISP2 ice core, Schaefer and others (Reference Schaefer2016) modeled hypothetical GIS fluctuation scenarios since 2.6 Ma and contrarily suggested that the GrIS may have near completely disappeared several times during the warmest and longest interglacial episodes of the Pleistocene. More recently, applying multiparametric analyses (SEM of grain coatings, in situ 10Be and 26Al, luminescence dating, geochemical analyses and characterization of fossils plants and biomarkers) in basal ice sediments from the Camp Century ice core, Christ and others (Reference Christ2021) postulated at least two GrIS reductions in the northwestern Greenland over the last ~3 Ma, including the presence of a tundra ecosystem during an ice-free episode within the last 1.1 Ma.
3. Materials and methods
3.1. NEEM core and samples description
We studied samples from the BIL of the NEEM ice core (Fig. 1), a ~2544 m-long ice core drilled between 2008 and 2012 in north-west Greenland (77.45°N, 51.06°W). Despite being folded in its lower section, the NEEM ice core provides a near-continuous paleoclimatic archive for at least the past 130 ka, with evidence of the penultimate Glacial Period (MIS6, Dahl-Jensen and others, Reference Dahl-Jensen2013). Below 2533.85 m depth, the core includes a 10 m sequence of debris-rich layers (Goossens and others, Reference Goossens2016). Analysis of the water-stable isotopes, ice fabrics, total gas content, debris weight and debris size distribution of BIL from NEEM identified different ice types: clear ice with specks, stratified debris-rich layers and ice containing dispersed debris (Goossens and others, Reference Goossens2016). The NEEM BIL has been interpreted as an ice–bedrock interface resulting from the incorporation of bedrock and till materials, as well as ice transformation processes occurring under a well-developed ice mass (Dahl-Jensen and others, Reference Dahl-Jensen2013; Goossens and others, Reference Goossens2016). The NEEM basal section differs from that at GRIP, where the BIL is thought to be a pre-existing ice remnant that was covered by an advance of a growing ice sheet in central Greenland (Tison and others, Reference Tison, Thorsteinsson, Lorrain and Kipfstuhl1994, Reference Tison1998; Weis and others, Reference Weis, Demaiffe, Souchez, Gow and Meese1997).
We first updated the initial log of the NEEM basal ice core (Goossens and others, Reference Goossens2016) by adding new macroscopical observations of the basal layers (Fig. 2a). We then provide a suite of new measurements focused on the debris material to decipher geological sources and better characterize the BIL environment and associated debris entrainment processes. We analyzed nine different samples representative of different levels of the basal section of the ice core that were isolated after ice cutting, melting and drying (orange bars in Fig. 2a). These samples cover ~6 m of core, at depths from 2536.75 m (top) to 2543.785 m (bottom). The upper five samples (4613, HT948, RD954, RD956, RD14/06) were already melted and dried in the study by Goossens and others (Reference Goossens2016), to report the debris weight content. The lower four samples (20 June 1/4, 2/4, 3/4, 4/4) were newly sampled for this study.
Below 2538 m depth, the drill head Hans Tausen (HT, 9.8 cm inner diameter) was changed for a purpose-built rockdrill head of 2.5 cm inner diameter. This was necessary to manage cutting through the increasing debris load but reduced the amount of available core material between 2537.990 and 2543.785 m (Fig. 2). The 2.5 cm diameter basal core limits the amount of available material, as a result not all the analyses presented in this study have been performed on all nine samples. The samples-analysis matrix is detailed in Table 1.
‘–’ means that the analysis has been performed in (Goossens and others, Reference Goossens2016).
3.2. Additional sedimentological analyses: debris proportion and granulometry
To build on the initial results of Goossens and others (Reference Goossens2016) and provide a better picture of the debris nature and abundance down to the bottom of the core (2543.785 m), we estimated the debris content and granulometry of the new samples. Each frozen subsample was first weighed at −20°C, then thawed and oven-dried at 50°C. The dried material was then weighed to calculate the weight percentage of debris in the ice. The sediments were then sieved using 75, 400 and 2000 μm sieves. Laser granulometry was performed on the size fraction <2000 μm at Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB, Brussels, Belgium) using a Malverner Mastersizer 3000® laser granulometer.
3.3. Mineralogical analyses
To characterize the sediments in the basal ice of the NEEM core, we used a multi-proxy analysis of the grains contained in the ice of the BIL. To investigate the diversity of mineralogy encountered in the basal sediments, the mineralogy of a few randomly selected grains (~2 mm) from samples RD954 (n = 10) and 20 June 3/4 (n = 14) was analyzed using a CAMECA SX100 electronic probe at Georessource Laboratory (Nancy, France). These grains were randomly hand-picked before being embedded into resin and polished.
3.4. Morphological analyses of sediment grains
To understand grain provenance and their transport history, we performed a morphometry analysis of sample grains (Cailleux and Tricart, Reference Cailleux and Tricart1959; Mahaney, Reference Mahaney2002; Woronko, Reference Woronko2016). For this, we first observed the selected samples with the light microscope, and we later used an SEM/EDS (scanning electron microscope/energy-dispersive spectrometer) approach to analyze grain morphology, composition and microtextures. Grain morphology and surface microfeatures can be interpreted to indicate different grain transport processes (glacial, fluvial, aeolian) and also reflect on their past and present environments, such as storage in soils (paleosols) or in ice, and in the presence of liquid water (Mahaney, Reference Mahaney2002). This approach has been applied in multiple glacial contexts and has proven useful to derive information on grain history, paleoenvironment and paleoweathering conditions (Tison and others, Reference Tison, Petit, Barnola and Mahaney1993; Mahaney, Reference Mahaney1995, Reference Mahaney2002; Mahaney and others, Reference Mahaney2013). A randomly selected and representative amount of grains (>100–300 μm sand-silt size grains) was observed using a JEOL JSM-6510 SEM at the Centre de Recherches Pétrographiques et Géochimiques (CRPG Nancy, France) for samples 4613 (<63, 63–125, >125 μm), HT948 (<63, 63–125, >125 μm), RD954 (<75, 75–250 μm), RD956 (<75, 75–250 μm), RD14/06 (<75, 75–250 μm), 20 June 1/4 (bulk), 20 June 2/4 (<75, 75–1000 μm), 20 June 3/4 (<75, 75–400 μm), 20 June 4/4 (<75, 75–400 μm). The chemical composition of selected key grains was determined with the EDS (energy-dispersive spectrometer) available on the same SEM instrument.
3.5. Geochemical analyses
3.5.1. ɛNd and 87Sr/86Sr analyses
To characterize the provenance of the silicate minerals in the NEEM BIL sediment and compare them with other Greenland records of aerial dust (Bory and others, Reference Bory, Biscaye and Grousset2003a, Reference Bory, Biscaye, Piotrowski and Steffensen2003b; Simonsen and others, Reference Simonsen2019), glacial sediments (Nagatsuka and others, Reference Nagatsuka2016) and bedrock (Collerson and others, Reference Collerson, McCulloch and Nutman1989; Weis and others, Reference Weis, Demaiffe, Souchez, Gow and Meese1997), we measured Sr and Nd isotopic ratios, as well as Rb and Sm, in the finest grain size (<63 or <75 μm, depending on the sample) of the samples RD954, RD956, RD14/06 and 20 June 1/4 to 20 June 4/4 at Laboratoire G-Time (Brussels, Belgium). About 100 mg of each sample was first digested using a mixture of concentrated sub-boiling HF and HNO3 in the proportion 1:3. After 48 h on hot plate at 120°C, the supernatant was removed and the solid residue was further digested in a fresh mixture of 1:3 HF:HNO3 in Parr high-pressure vessels for 48 h at 150°C. The dissolved samples were recombined with the supernatant and evaporated. Concentrated subboiled HCl was added at 120°C for 48 h. After evaporation, samples were re-dissolved in 2N HCl and two aliquots of 1% (in weight) each were taken for Sr isotope measurement and Rb/Sr measurement, and a 5% aliquot was taken for Sm-Nd spike. The rest was used for Nd isotope measurements.
The Sr aliquot was purified using Sr.Spec resin by rinsing the matrix using 2N and 7N HNO3 and collecting Sr with 0.05N HNO3. The Sr cut was measured on the Nu Plasma 2 MC-ICP-MC at Laboratoire G-Time, ULB in dry mode using a DSN dessolvator in 0.05N HNO3. All values were recorrected to the accepted value of NBS987 = 0.710248 (Weis and others, Reference Weis2006). The USGS BHVO-2 standard yielded an 87Sr/86Sr of 0.703488 ± 0.000009 (2 SE) comparable with the accepted value of 0.703487 ± 0.000019 (Weis and others, Reference Weis2006). The Rb/Sr ratio was directly measured on the ICP-MS Agilent 7700 by preparing both an elemental and a gravimetrically prepared ratio calibration curves, and using In as internal standard for monitoring possible drift. Each sample was measured three times and the RSD was better than 1%.
For Nd isotopes, the matrix was first removed by using 2 mL of cationic resin AG50-X8 200-400 mesh in 1.5N HCl, rare earth elements (REE) being collected in 6N HCl. Subsequently, Nd was purified from other REE using HDEHP resin with 0.16N HCl, Nd being collected with 0.27N HCl. The spiked aliquot followed the same procedure, except that Sm was collected further on the HDEHP resin by using 0.75N HCl. The Nd cut was measured on the Nu Plasma 2 MC-ICP-MC at Laboratoire G-Time, ULB in dry mode using a DSN dessolvator in 0.05N HNO3. All values were recorrected to the accepted value of the Rennes standard of 143Nd/144Nd = 0.511961 (Chauvel and Blichert-Toft, Reference Chauvel and Blichert-Toft2001). USGS BHVO-2 standard yielded an 143Nd/144Nd of 0.512986 ± 0.000006 (2 SE), to be compared with the accepted value of 0.512984 ± 0.000011 (Weis and others, Reference Weis2006). The spiked Nd and Sm were measured on the Nu Plasma 2 and the concentration was obtained by iterative calculation. Total procedural blanks yield <400 pg for Sr, <70 pg for Nd and <15 pg for Sm.
3.5.2. Organic geochemistry: C, N and δ13c
C and N concentrations, as well as the δ13C, provide clues about the origin, the nature and the degree of degradation of the organic material produced by the ecosystems prevailing during ice-free intervals (e.g. Bierman and others, Reference Bierman2014 and references therein). We measured total organic carbon (C), total nitrogen (N) and δ13C on the finest grain size (<63 or <75 μm, depending on the sample) of six samples to understand what surface material, including vegetation, from ice-free paleoenvironments was incorporated into the BIL by ice–substratum interactions. We analyzed the six samples that had sufficient amounts for these carbon nitrogen analyses.
One batch of carbon analyses was performed at VUB (Brussels, Belgium), with samples RD956 and 20 June 2/4. A second batch of carbon and nitrogen analyses was then performed at CRPG (Nancy, France), for the samples HT948, RD954, RD956, 20 June 1/4, 20 June 2/4, 20 June 3/4. This approach allows evaluation of the interlaboratory reproducibility.
In both labs, the determination of total carbon and nitrogen concentration, and the 13C/12C ratio of organic matter (hereafter referred in delta notation as δ13C vs V-PDB) were performed using online combustion coupled to an Elemental Analyzer – Isotope Ratio Mass Spectrometer (EA-IRMS). At the VUB, the measurements were performed on a EURO Elemental Analyzer (Eurovector, Italy) coupled with a Nu Horizon IRMS (Nu instruments, UK), with the temperature of the oven and the chromatographic column at 1030 and 80°C, respectively. At the CRPG, a Thermo Scientific Elemental Analyzer IsoLink IRMS System was used, with the temperature of the oven and the chromatographic column at 1020 and 70°C, respectively. At VUB, prior to analysis, the samples underwent a decarbonization process (i.e. contact with a 5% HCl solution and oven drying overnight) to which no response was observed. At CRPG, samples were not decarbonized based on the observations previously made at VUB that lead to the conclusion that no carbonate was present. In both laboratories, samples were wrapped in tin capsules (~30 mg) before combustion. At VUB, C concentrations were calibrated using a sucrose internal standard. The international standard Low Organic Soil Standard OAS (C = 1.61 ± 0.09%w/w; N = 0.133 ± 0.023%w/w; δ13C = −26.66 ± 0.24‰) was included in the analysis and measured with a reproducibility of 0.5‰ (C). At CRPG, carbon isotopic composition was determined by comparison with two internal and two international standards routinely included during the analysis: (i) BFSd (C = 0.53 wt.%; δ13C = −21.5‰), (ii) CRPG_M2 (C = 0.408 wt.%; δ13C = −25.0‰), (iii) NBS22 (δ13C = −30.0‰) and (iv) USGS24 (δ13C = −16.1‰). Values are quoted in the delta notation (δ) in ‰ relative to V-PDB and the reproducibility was better than 0.2‰. The thermal conductivity detector signals calibrated with internal standards were used to calculate carbon and nitrogen concentrations: (i) BFSd (C = 0.53 wt.%), (ii) CRPG_M2 (C = 0.408 wt.%), (iii) Eurovector Synthetic Soil Mix #4 (C = 2.417 wt.%; N = 480 ppm), (iv) USGS AGV-1 (N = 28 ppm) and USGS G-2 (N = 34 ppm).
3.5.3. Meteoric 10Be
We measured meteoric 10Be (10Bem) adsorbed on the sediment surface. 10Bem is a cosmogenic nuclide produced in the atmosphere and deposited on the Earth's surface through precipitation and dry deposition. It partitions strongly to particle surfaces in soil and sediment (e.g. Pavich and others, Reference Pavich, Brown, Klein and Middleton1984; Jungers and others, Reference Jungers2009; Graly and others, Reference Graly, Bierman, Reusser and Pavich2010). The 10Bem proxy is used in soil science to provide chronological constraints on soil processes, evaluate weathering rates and provide clues on the origin of sediments (e.g. Jungers and others, Reference Jungers2009; Graly and others, Reference Graly, Bierman, Reusser and Pavich2010; Willenbring and von Blanckenburg, Reference Willenbring and von Blanckenburg2010; Wittmann and others, Reference Wittmann2015). 10Bem measured in materials from sub-ice-sheet environments records previous exposure of sediments during periods of deglaciation. Analyses of 10Bem in GISP2 basal sediments were interpreted to infer paleosol exposure time (Bierman and others, Reference Bierman2014), while measurements of 10Bem in periglacial sediments provided clues about nature and rate of subglacial processes (Graly and others, Reference Graly, Corbett, Bierman, Lini and Neumann2018). Here we test this approach on the basal sediments of the NEEM core, to better constrain the history of these debris. These data also allow us to discuss potential exchanges of 10Bem between the embedded sediments in the BIL and the overlying clear ice of NEEM, in which 10Bem was previously measured by Sturevik-Storm and others (Reference Sturevik-Storm2015).
10Bem was extracted from the finest grain size (<63 or <75 μm, depending on the sample) of isolated and dried sediment (see section 2.2.1), following two procedures: (1) by KHF2 total fusion of the sediments (4613, HT948, RD954, RD956, 20 June 1/4, 20 June 2/4 and 20 June 3/4) at the University of Vermont (Burlington, USA) and (2) by leaching of the sediment (4613, HT948, RD954, 20 June 1/4, 20 June 2/4, 20 June 3/4 and 20 June 4/4) at CRPG (Nancy, France). The first method (total fusion) extracts 10Bem adsorbed on the grain surface as well as the in situ 10Be (10Bei) component contained within the grains. The second procedure (leaching) allows the measurement of 10Bem and 9Be adsorbed on the surface of the grains and the determination of the 10Bei component after a final dissolution step. However, both approaches should yield similar results, since the adsorbed meteoric 10Bem is several orders of magnitudes greater than the in situ component (e.g. Christ and others, Reference Christ2021).
The extraction by KHF2 fusion is based on the procedure of Stone (Reference Stone1998). Sample size ranged between 20 and 500 mg of dry sediment. We measured the mass of each sample and added ~1.3 g of a 304 ppm 9Be carrier solution, equivalent to ~400 μg of 9Be (2.03 × 1019.9Be atoms). 10Bem was extracted after fluxing of the sample by successive perchlorate and alkaline precipitations. Final precipitates were dried using a 65°C hotplate and burned to turn into oxides before measurement of the 10Be/9Be ratio.
The extraction by leaching followed the chemical procedure first described by Bourlès and others (Reference Bourlès, Raisbeck and Yiou1989), updated and detailed in Simon and others (Reference Simon2016). 10Bem and 9Be were leached from 6 to 100 mg of dry sediment using a 0.04 M hydroxylamine and 25% acetic acid solution at 90 ± 5°C for 6 h. After this step, we took a small aliquot of 2 mL of the resulting solution to measure the 9Be concentration. About 0.25 g of the 2020 ± 80 ppm in-house 9Be carrier solution PHENA (Puchol and others, Reference Puchol2017) was added to the remaining solution prior to the 10Be extraction. 10Be was finally extracted and purified by successive separations on anion- and cation-exchange resin columns and alkaline precipitations of Be(OH)2. The final deposits were then oxidized at 700°C for 1 h.
For both procedures, the final BeO oxides were mixed with Nb powder and loaded into nickel cathodes for AMS 10Be measurements. All 10Be/9Be ratios were measured at the French national AMS facility ASTER (Arnold and others, Reference Arnold2010) at CEREGE (Aix-en-Provence, France). Measured 10Be/9Be ratios were calibrated against an in-house standard STD-11, assuming a 10Be/9Be ratio equal to 1.191 ± 0.013 × 10−11 (Braucher and others, Reference Braucher2015), equivalent to the KNSTD07 standardization (Nishiizumi and others, Reference Nishiizumi2007). Analytical uncertainties of AMS measurements include counting statistics (internal reproducibility) and external reproducibility (~5%; Arnold and others, Reference Arnold2010) and blank correction. Uncertainties from chemical blanks were calculated for each batch (total fusion and leaching) based on the mean of two individual blanks. Blanks have ratios of 6.67 ± 0.40 × 10−15 (total fusion) and 1.14 ± 0.30 × 10−15 (leaching) (Table 2).
For 20 June 2/4, we used the mean of the three CRPG replicates. 10Be/9Be ratios are uncorrected from the chemical blank. 10Be atom in the samples is calculated from the corresponding ratios and corrected from that of the mean of the chemical blanks at UVM and CRPG apart. [10Be] is calculated from the blank corrected number of 10Be atoms.
4. Results
4.1. Debris weight content and granulometry
Debris weight content for the four deepest samples (20 June 1/4, 20 June 2/4, 20 June 3/4, 20 June 4/4) varies between 4% (20 June 1/4) and 59% (20 June 4/4), with values around 25% for the two middle ones. 20 June 4/4 contains a pebble (~2 × 1 × 1.5 cm) that accounts for most of its total volume. When considered with the samples from the BIL previously studied by Goossens and others (Reference Goossens2016), the compiled observations display a first-order increase of the debris weight content with increasing depth (Fig. 2b). However, the presence of a few layers at >10% debris weight content (higher up in the sequence) sandwiched within the clear ice suggests shearing/folding processes of bottom material (Goossens and others, Reference Goossens2016).
Laser granulometry curves demonstrate a sharp increase of the coarser fraction at the boundary between the samples 20 June 1/4 (Fig. 2e-E) and 20 June 2/4 (Fig. 2e-F), reinforced by the presence of a pebble in sample 20 June 4/4. When compared to the curves of the samples from the BIL previously studied by Goossens and others (Reference Goossens2016), the three deepest samples appear to be coarser than in the upper part of the core. The granulometry of sample 20 June 1/4 (Fig. 2e-E) is globally in agreement with the granulometry observed in the ice layer displaying the first dispersed debris at the top of the sequence (Fig. 2e-A). This observation also supports shearing/folding processes mixing horizons of different origins (Goossens and others, Reference Goossens2016).
4.2. Mineralogic characterization of the sediments
Mineralogical analysis of RD954 and 20 June 3/4 by electronic probe showed the presence of quartz, plagioclase and K-feldspar (Fig. 3). A rough counting based on binocular observations indicates that these three mineral species represent a large majority of the grains (80–90%). The analysis also reveals the presence of muscovite, carbonate, clay, amphibole and garnet, in lesser proportions (10–20%) (Fig. 3).
4.3. SEM imagery: characterization of the main features at the grain surfaces
The SEM imagery of grain microtextures and EDS chemical analysis of nine different core sample groups are the basis of our detailed interpretations. Figures 4 and 5 present a selection of SEM photos showing the diversity of grain morphology and the main microfeatures encountered in the different samples. Figure 4 displays upper samples of the core section: groups 4613, HT948, RD954, RD956 and RD14/06, while Figure 5 shows the lower samples: groups 20 June 1/4, 20 June 2/4, 20 June 3/4 and 20 June 4/4. A larger collection of other pictures is available in Supplementary material.
Our SEM observations of the grain textures show that, in all these samples, there is a mix of weathered (dissolution-affected and coated, Figs 4a, d, f, 5f) grains and other physically abraded grains (by ice-rock or grain to grain contact, Figs 5b, c, f), with an increase in the proportion of fresh grains toward the bottom of the core (Figs 4, 5). Indeed, microtextures indicating glacial transport and glacial crushing (triangular-shaped grains, with subparallel and conchoidal fractures, uplifted plates, grooves (Figs 4b–f, 5b, c, f) and weathering features (dissolution microfeatures, coating; Figs 4b, d, e)) were found at all depths in the BIL, with a less intense weathering toward the bottom of the core (Fig. 5e).
No round grains were observed and nearly all grains have angular to subangular shapes, the latter being dominant among the analyzed grains. Numerous triangle-shaped grains were imaged (Fig. 5f), a form that possibly is a product of variable pressure release or shearing, from stick–slip pressure dynamics (Mahaney, Reference Mahaney1995). In all samples, weathered grains have numerous microfeatures indicative of physical abrasion, including uplifted plates (Fig. 4a), strong-to-light dissolution microfeatures of varying size (Figs 4f, 5d) thin-to-thick coatings (Figs 4b, d, e), subparallel fractures (Figs 4d, 5d) and grooves (Fig. 5a). Very angular grains with fresh fractures and evidence of physical abrasion were also observed, with greater abundance at the bottom of the core (Figs 4a, 5a–c, f). Mineralized wood/pith fragments were also present at the bottom of the core (Fig. 5a).
A grain of unknown composition (probably feldspar), shown in Figure 4c, displays important minor uplifted plates, with multiple dissolution features and adhering particles, along with thick coating (Smalley, Reference Smalley1966). Such features indicate a progression from a pre-weathered environment (favoring dissolution and grain coatings) to active glaciation yielding the adhering particles, from glacial grinding. Figures 4a–d, f, 5b and d display a variety of angular to very angular quartz grains in different mechanical/weathering states presenting multiple microfeatures such as uplifted plates, dissolution microfeatures, subparallel fractures, grooves (striae) and v-shaped percussion cracks. While scarce, the v-shaped percussion cracks suggest water action, possibly from moulin or basal meltwater transport (Mahaney, Reference Mahaney2002). In particular, the grain in Figure 4b is covered by a thick coating (~2 μm deduced from the SEM instrument operating at 20 keV) of secondary minerals, containing mainly Fe, with Na, Mg, Al, K and Ca. This coating, shown in brown in Figure 4b, locally covers adhering particles (arrow A) and is intercepted by fresh fractures within the grain (arrow B), which undoubtedly occurred after the weathering event. A similar observation is made on the grain shown in Figure 4e. Thus, we have identified grains carrying mechanical/weathering/scars indicative of successive stages of weathering, glacial crushing and transport.
The grain in Figure 4d is quartz with secondary mineral coatings (arrow A), rounded edges and different angularities (arrow B). The exposed internal part of the grain displays subparallel to conchoidal fractures in variable weathered states, with adhering particles (arrow C). Weathered subparallel fractures (arrow A) are also visible on the surface of the grain in Figure 4f, partially covered by a secondary mineral coating (arrow B) and adhering particles. For almost all grains, fresh-appearing adhering particles are present on the surface of specimens thought to be the result of multiple glaciations.
In contrast, some grains, notably those from the lower-most part of the core, show very few signs of weathering, but have various fractures, grooves and microfeatures due to glacial transport (Figs 5a, c, f). The signs of weathering on the grain in Figure 5f (center left) suggest a sojourn in ice free of weathering events since bedrock release. Figure 5d displays a grain with fresh fracture, subparallel fractures and striations (see arrow), all comprising damage that are characteristic of bedrock release followed by grain-to-grain contact during glacial crushing processes. Also, Figures 5c and f present very angular quartz grains with sharp edges and few adhering particles, with fresh surfaces that display no sign of weathering. Finally, we also observed few mineralized wood fragments with visible nodal complexes (Fig. 5e) that are coated with Fe oxides. The fact these fragments are mineralized is deduced from the observation that this material sinks in water. Such plant debris was only found in the sample 20 June 2/4.
4.4. Strontium and neodymium isotopic composition
Strontium and neodymium were measured in seven samples: RD954, RD956, RD14/06, 20 June 1/4, 20 June 2/4, 20 June 3/4 and 20 June 4/4. Results are presented in Table 3 and Figure 6. Measured 87Sr/86Sr ratios are tightly clustered and range between 0.750745 (20 June 4/4) and 0.761530 (20 June 3/4) (Table 3 and Fig. 6). ɛ143Nd range from −32.54 (RD956) to −29.42 (20 June 3/4). The two lower-most samples have the highest ɛ143Nd values, while the others are statistically undistinguishable.
87Sr/86Sr values are corrected for Rb decay assuming a crystallization age of 2.3 Ga.
a Calculated assuming a present-day 143Nd/144Nd ratio of 0.512638 for the CHUR bulk Earth (Wasserburg and others, Reference Wasserburg, Jacobsen, De Paolo, McCulloch and Wen1981).
b Isotopic ratio at 2.3 Ga after correcting for the decay of the 147Sm measured in each sample.
cIsotopic ratio at 2.3 Ga after correcting for the decay of the 87Rb measured in each sample.
4.5. Total organic carbon, nitrogen concentrations and δ13c
Total carbon, total nitrogen and δ13C results from CRPG (Nancy) and VUB (Brussels) are presented in Table 4. Total carbon and δ13C of samples RD956 and 20 June 2/4 were measured twice, both at VUB and CRPG, to evaluate the methods and the interlaboratory reproducibility (Figs 7a, b). Total organic carbon concentrations measured in these two samples are ~10–20% higher at CRPG compared to VUB (Fig. 7a). The δ13C data measured at CRPG are also slightly less negative than those measured at VUB, yielding a mismatch beyond 2σ analytical uncertainty for one sample (Fig. 7b). Yet, these differences remain smaller than the variability between the six samples measured at CRPG (Fig. 8). They could be the result of spatial heterogeneities of the samples or discrepancies in laboratories' calibration. Without further evidence of any analytical bias, we consider all data from both laboratories (Fig. 8 and Table 4).
The number of replicates for each sample is indicated in bracket after the sample name. Uncertainties of the C and N concentrations correspond to the internal and external uncertainties.
The carbon concentration measured in sample 20 June 1/4 (CRPG) (not shown in Fig. 8) is extremely high (~7%) and its C/N ratio (~350) has no equivalent, in natural systems (e.g. Meyers, Reference Meyers1994). Moreover, the δ13C of this sample (−30.6‰) is significantly lighter than those of the other samples (−22 to −27‰; Table 4). Such peculiar composition leads us to postulate that sample 20 June 1/4 might have been contaminated by the drilling fluid used at NEEM (ESTISOLTM 240 and COASOLTM, a mixture of carbon-rich and nitrogen-free biodiesels). This C-rich fluid could have biased upward the C/N ratios. Since other samples display C/N ratios that are compatible with the range reported in terrestrial environments, we consider that 20 June 1/4 is the unique sample affected by this contamination. We thus discarded the anomalously high value of sample 20 June 1/4 from further discussion. Gas chromatography could help in future studies to detect such a contamination.
Total carbon concentrations ([C]) range between 0.17 ± 0.02 (20 June 2/4 – VUB) and 0.87 ± 0.04 wt% (RD956 – CRPG). The highest C concentrations are observed in the upper samples (HT948, RD954, RD956), and display a first-order top-down decrease in Figure 7. Nitrogen concentrations ([N]) range between 67 ± 14 (20 June 2/4 – CRPG) and 341 ± 10 ppm (HT948 – CRPG). In line with the spatial trend observed for [C], [N] is also characterized by a decrease toward the base of the ice core (Fig. 7). C/N ratios range between 23.8 ± 1.2 (HT948 – CRPG) and 69.8 ± 3.5 (RD956 – CRPG), without any clear relationship with depth (Fig. 7). δ13C varies between −22.4 ± 0.3‰ (20 June 3/4 – CRPG) and −28.4 ± 0.2‰ (RD956 – VUB) and does not display any clear trend with depth (Fig. 7).
4.6. Meteoric 10Be concentrations
The 10Bem concentrations obtained with the two different methods (total fusion and leaching) are presented in Table 2, Figures 7 and 8. Among the six samples extracted in replicate (using both methods), 10Bem concentrations measured in four samples are similar within 1σ analytical uncertainties (Table 2 and Fig. 7c). Two samples (HT948 and RD954) display statistically different values but remain within the same magnitude. 10Bem concentrations obtained with the leaching method (CRPG) tend to be higher compared to those from the total fusion method (UVM, Fig. 7c). This counterintuitive observation could suggest analytical discrepancy; however, given the small number of analyses, this slight difference could also reflect samples heterogeneities. Because the two datasets are within the same order of magnitude, we will discuss both of them further.
The lower-most sample from the core (20 June 4/4 – leaching only) has the highest concentration, (1.34 ± 0.21) × 107 at.g−1. All the other samples, regardless of the methods, have 10Bem concentrations an order of magnitude lower and range between (1.00 ± 0.40) × 106 (RD954) and (5.50 ± 1.65) × 106 at/g (4613). Apart from the fact that the highest concentration is observed in the lower-most sample of the core, there is no noticeable trend in 10Bem concentration with depth.
5. Discussion
The new data reported here add to previous knowledge of Greenland, its bedrock and interactions of the surface and solid Earth with the ice sheet. The data allow us to improve our understanding on three important topics: first, we constrain the debris nature and province to establish whether basal material was derived from local rock; second, SEM imagery of grain textures and meteoric 10Be provide clues about ice dynamics and erosional processes at the base of the GrIS, and occurrence of past ice-free conditions; finally, the geochemical analysis of the organic matter (N and C) provides clues about the nature of ecosystems during these ice-free conditions, and also about preservation of organic material in these BILs.
5.1 Rock source of the NEEM basal ice layers and implications for the whole of Greenland
Geochemical and mineralogical observations on the NEEM basal debris provide important clues about the provenance of debris in the BIL. These data show a strong similarity with the rocks outcropping in northwestern Greenland, but also with local dust sources of the east coast. Although the NEEM core did not retrieve local bedrock, the principle of parsimony implies that this observation favors a rather local origin for the NEEM basal material.
First, it is important to discuss the potential transport distance of the basal ice material considering the present characteristics of the GIS dynamics. Given the NEEM core is located on an ice divide of the GIS today (Fig. 1), the basal debris found at NEEM probably underwent less lateral transport than other locations affected by much faster ice motions (e.g. https://eo4society.esa.int/2021/07/01/a-breakthrough-in-the-quality-of-sentinel-1-ice-velocity-products/). However, given that the NEEM ice surface is at a lower altitude compared to the Greenland summit (where the GRIP and GISP2 cores are located), the ice motion along this divide is not null, and there is still a potential for BIL (and debris) transport from regions located between the summit and NEEM (Dahl-Jensen and others, Reference Dahl-Jensen2013). Modeling of ice particle trajectories showed that the Eemian ice originated from a few hundred kilometers upstream of NEEM (Fig. 1a in Dahl-Jensen and others, Reference Dahl-Jensen2013). In the NEEM core, the Eemian ice stands ~100 m above the debris-rich BIL; considering the horizontal ice velocity decrease with depth and the ice particle trajectories modeled by Dahl-Jensen and others (Reference Dahl-Jensen2013), the total displacement of the NEEM sediment from its source area is probably <200 km. This number should be considered with caution since ice dynamics may have changed during the Pleistocene.
Second, the mineral assemblages found in NEEM are typical of the Precambrian geological formations that crop out on the northwest Greenland coast. According to the geological map interpolated from coastal outcrops, the NEEM site probably belongs to the Committee-Melville Archean belt observed on the NW coast that is largely dominated by mixed-gneiss complexes (Fig. 1b; Dawes, Reference Dawes2009). Isotopic Sr and Nd data provide complementary observations that support this conclusion. The measurement of the father isotopes 147Sm and 87Rb in these samples permit to tentatively derive Sm-Nd and Rb-Sr isochrones: the seven samples yield overdispersed isochrones (errorchrons), with mean standard weighted deviation significantly larger than 1 (close to 100), indicating that this tills material probably result from the mixing of minerals having heterogeneous ages. Despite the existence of these heterogeneities, we can however report the apparent ages of these two errorchrons: our dataset yields ages of 2.3 ± 0.6 and 2.3 ± 1.1 Ga for the Rb-Sr and Sm-Nd systems, respectively. Such values are compatible, within uncertainties, to the Archean and Early Proterozoic eons and the ages obtained from the same isotopic systems in western and central Greenland (Collerson and others, Reference Collerson, McCulloch and Nutman1989; Weis and others, Reference Weis, Demaiffe, Souchez, Gow and Meese1997).
Although heterogeneities in Sm and Rb may modify the initial ɛ143Nd and 87Sr/86Sr of the rock sources, several studies that documented the Sr and Nd isotopic signatures of Greenland rock did not necessarily apply this radioactive decay correction. Hence, for comparison with other Sr and Nd dataset measured in rocks, till and dust from other Greenland areas, we plotted our ɛNd and 87Sr/86Sr NEEM data along with the other records, without performing any correction for the radioactive decay of 147Sm and 87Rb (Fig. 6). In this diagram, 87Sr/86Sr and ɛ143Nd isotopic signatures of the six NEEM basal sediments globally agree with the broad range signatures of the Precambrian gneiss and granite from terrains cropping out in northwest Greenland and Labrador (Collerson and others, Reference Collerson, McCulloch and Nutman1989; Weis and others, Reference Weis, Demaiffe, Souchez, Gow and Meese1997). The Sr and Nd isotopic compositions of the NEEM debris also overlap with those of moraines and cryoconite dusts measured in the nearby western edge of the GrIS, in Thule and Qaanag (Nagatsuka and others, Reference Nagatsuka2016), as well with the dust sources from the Skreantdal area, located in the Eastern Coast (Simonsen and others, Reference Simonsen2019) (Fig. 6). The 87Sr/86Sr and ɛ143Nd signatures of these NEEM tills are however clearly distinct from several dust sources from the East Greenland coast (Fig. 6), and also from subglacial material retrieved in the GISP2 and GRIP ice cores (Central Greenland – Figs 1, 6). These distinct Sr and Nd isotopic signature indicates that the basal debris of NEEM and Central Greenland are derived from different rock types. This observation is consistent with the subglacial geological limits inferred from the interpolation of terrains outcropping on the island's margins (Figs 1, 6): GISP2 and GRIP are expected to be located on Paleoproterozoic terrains that outcrop along 50% of the Central Western Coast, while the NEEM site is presumed to belong to the extrapolated position of the Committee-Melville Archean belt that outcrops along the NW coast (Fig. 1; Kirkland and others, Reference Kirkland, Pease, Whitehouse and Ineson2009).
Finally, it is worth noting that this new Nd and Sr isotopic dataset reported for the NEEM basal debris is clearly different from those of dust embedded in younger Pleistocene and Holocene ice of Central (NorthGRIP, GRIP, Site A) and Southern Greenland (DYIE-3) (Fig. 6; data from Biscaye and others, Reference Biscaye1997; Svensson and others, Reference Svensson, Biscaye and Grousset2000; Bory and others, Reference Bory, Biscaye, Svensson and Grousset2002, Reference Bory, Biscaye and Grousset2003a, Reference Bory, Biscaye, Piotrowski and Steffensen2003b). This observation strengthens the previously established conclusion that rules out a local Greenland origin for the dust embedded in the Pleistocene and Holocene ice of the GrIS: dust that has ‘rained’ above the GrIS during the Pleistocene originates from Asian deserts (e.g. Biscaye and others, Reference Biscaye1997; Simonsen and others, Reference Simonsen2019).
5.2. Grains imagery: SEM/EDS textural constraints on the GrIS dynamic
Our SEM analyses of grain textures (Figs 4, 5) provide information that permit constraining multi-scale processes, and notably the chronology of past waning and waxing of the GrIS. The presence of high-relief features such as grooves, numerous uplifted plates and subparallel to conchoidal fractures indicates that grains were affected by stick–slip pressures possibly up to ~200 bars (Barcilon and Macayeal, Reference Barcilon and MacAyeal1993; Mahaney, Reference Mahaney2002) and transported by ice that was probably >1000 m thick (Mahaney, Reference Mahaney1995). In the NEEM BIL sediment, we did not find any rounded grains or signs of abrasion fatigue indicative of previous aeolian or fluvial transport and abrasion (Mahaney, Reference Mahaney2002), in contrast to the observations previously made at Camp Century core (Whalley and Langway, Reference Whalley and Langway1980). This suggests that these features have never been developed or have been erased by subsequent glacial erosion. Goossens and others (Reference Goossens2016) discarded an aeolian origin of the sediment based on debris size distributions through the basal core, but this does not preclude aeolian delivery to surfaces undergoing weathering prior to glaciation. The lack of abrasion features and any aeolian-induced shock melting from grain-to-grain collisions in SEM observations reinforces this conclusion. Even if uplifted plates and arcuate cracks may sometimes be observed in loess, the majority of the observed features and microtextures of the NEEM grains are not compatible with aeolian transport. Moreover, the coarse grain sizes of sediments at the bottom of the ice core (Fig. 2) are not likely to have been transported by air. Although it is possible that grains were transported via fluvial or subglacial meltwater prior to their incorporation into the ice, the majority of grain surface features observed by SEM indicate that these grains were extracted from bedrock, transported and reshaped by glacial erosion and abrasion (Figs 4, 5).
Despite this significant glacial imprint, not all grains have the same appearance and, hence, they do not share the same history. The heavy weathered coatings, intersected by more recent abraded faces on some grains, hold a weathering history prior to the final ice abrasion (Figs 4b, d–f). The thickness and aspect of these alteration coatings suggest formation in a preexisting soil (paleosol) environment that developed prior to sediment incorporation into the ice, where grains were later mechanically abraded and crushed. Furthermore, the presence of fossil wood in one of the bottom samples (Fig. 5e) indicates that the previous vegetation in these soils were mixed with glacial sediment that contained poorly weathered grains. This observation suggests that the BIL layer has probably incorporated some of a weathered paleosol and mixed it with less weathered sediments that were initially located deeper in the paleo-regolith in the vicinity of bedrock. Plant material, diatoms, fungi, microbes and insect fossils are present in the basal sediment of the Camp Century Greenland core (Harwood, Reference Harwood1986; Christ and others, Reference Christ2021) and even in Antarctic paleosols (Mahaney and others, Reference Mahaney, Stewart and Kalm2001; Lewis and others, Reference Lewis2008; Hart and others, Reference Hart2011; Mahaney, Reference Mahaney2015; Mahaney and Schwartz, Reference Mahaney and Schwartz2021). These are clues indicative of warmer climatic conditions conducive to weathering and soil morphogenesis.
Our observations showed that some features cross-cut or were superimposed on other preexisting features of these grains (e.g. Figs 4b, d, f). Hence, some grains can be considered as mineralogical ‘palimpsests’ recording successive geomorphological and glacial histories. In these grains, the weathered aspect and the chemical coating deposited over glacial features indicates that chemical weathering occurred after an initial glacial crushing step. Glacial crushing post-dates all these previous features in several grains (Figs 4b, e, f). Such relationships are key because they permit us to reconstruct the succession of events and propose a broad scale history of the GrIS fluctuations: (i) initial weathering of grains in ice-free conditions, (ii) glacial abrasion, crushing and transport due to an earlier GrIS advance, (iii) weathering with the presence of liquid water, probably during ice-free conditions resulting from a significant retreat of the GrIS, (iv) glacial abrasion and transport that occurred during glacial readvance leading to the modern configuration of the GrIS (Figs 4b, d, f).
Although all grains did not record all of these three events, the majority of the observed features are compatible with a scenario involving two glacial events separated by a period of ice-free conditions. The numerous adhering particles observed on almost all grains (Figs 4, 5) were probably produced and deposited during the second, more recent glacial episode, while the majority of the weathering features had been acquired by water circulation and grain dissolution/precipitation in a deglaciated soil (paleosol) environment. However, secondary low-intensity weathering might also have occurred after the incorporation of grains into the ice with ongoing melting/refreezing processes (Goossens and others, Reference Goossens2016). Such chemical weathering may happen under an active ice sheet when grains were in contact with meltwater and thus dominated by the incongruent dissolution of silicate (Urra and others, Reference Urra2019). However, such subglacial weathering was probably not intense enough to produce weathering features and the thickest coating (up to 10 μm) observed on some grains (Fig. 4) (Mahaney, Reference Mahaney2002). Hence, even if subglacial weathering may have occurred, a deglaciation phase that led to prolonged subaerial conditions can be considered as the most probable scenario.
Some grains show less evidence of weathering but have numerous glacial transport microfeatures, notably in the bottom section of the core (Figs 5a, c, d). Fresh fractures indicating grain-to-grain contact (Fig. 5d) suggest recent incorporation into the ice from bedrock and a transportation time shorter than the weathered grains previously described in the upper sections. This type of debris is only observed in the samples at the bottom of the ice core (20 June 1/4 to 20 June 4/4) while the weathered-coated grains are found in all samples.
Together, these observations suggest two origins of debris found in the BIL. Some debris originated from a weathered substrate (probably the preglacial-paleosol) that was transported in the ice, where grains were modeled by abrasion/fracturing, followed again by weathering (most probably during a deglacial episode), and later incorporated into the ice. Other debris are sourced from the local substrate directly underneath the ice with little transport and shorter residence time, yielding to sharp edges and limited weathering. This second type of less-weathered debris is more abundant in the deepest section of the core, which suggests that the mixing and transportation is less efficient in the vicinity of the ice/substratum interface. Also, the sediment at the top of the BIL (above 20 June 1/4) has a much finer granulometry compared to the material found at the very bottom (under 20 June 2/4), suggesting a potential size sorting effect during the shearing process of grain entrapment and transport within the ice (Tison and others, Reference Tison, Petit, Barnola and Mahaney1993).
5.3. Significance of sediment-hosted meteoric 10Be in the NEEM silty ice
Measured 10Bem concentrations in NEEM sediments (between ~1 and ~10 × 106 at/g−1) are one to more than two orders of magnitude less than those measured in the basal sediments of GISP2 (107 to 108 at.g−1, Bierman and others, Reference Bierman2014) (Fig. 9). Measured 10Bem concentrations at NEEM are of the same order of magnitude as those measured in Greenland glaciofluvial sediments (Nelson and others, Reference Nelson, Bierman, Shakun and Rood2014) and in glacial marine diamict offshore of northwestern Greenland that was derived from erosion of the island (Christ and others, Reference Christ2020) (Fig. 9). This similarity suggests that 10Bem concentrations under much of the ice sheet are relatively low and that concentrations as high as those measured at GISP2 and in a small number of more marginal silty ice samples (Graly and others, Reference Graly, Corbett, Bierman, Lini and Neumann2018) are unusual. Such high concentrations of 10Bem could represent samples derived from pre-glacial landscapes that remain preserved below the ice sheet or from areas exposed during interglacial periods when ice was absent for long periods of time.
We suspect that the low concentrations of 10Bem at NEEM reflect effective erosion and/or short periods of interglacial exposure. Short periods of exposure limit the input of 10Bem from the atmosphere whereas erosion removes the uppermost parts of the soil and regolith profiles that often contain the highest concentrations of 10Bem (Graly and others, Reference Graly, Bierman, Reusser and Pavich2010). In permafrost, most 10Bem is contained in the shallow active layer which is typically no more than 1–2 m deep, and sometimes much less (see profiles in Bierman and others, Reference Bierman2014 and Diaz and others, Reference Diaz2021). Thus, glacial erosion of surface materials can remove large portions of the 10Bem inventory from the landscape. Considering the mixed grain populations observed using SEM analysis, it is probable that the sediment samples from which we extracted 10Bem are a mixture of two endmembers: some were freshly mined from bedrock by glacial abrasion and plucking while others were reworked from interglacial or pre-glacial paleosols. Fresh grains from unweathered substratum carry very low concentrations of 10Bem (<104 at.g−1) whereas the grains sourced from upper soil layers are likely to carry much greater concentrations of 10Bem in their grain coatings (>106 at.g−1) (Fig. 9).
There are uncertainties inherent to extracting 10Bem from silty ice, but we do not believe these explain the low concentrations of 10Bem measured in NEEM samples. 10Bem concentrations measured in the NEEM clear ice is ~104 at.gice−1 (Sturevik-Storm and others, Reference Sturevik-Storm2015), two orders of magnitude below the concentrations reported here in the NEEM basal sediments. Although 10Bem exchange between ice and debris still need to be better understood (e.g. Baumgartner and others, Reference Baumgartner1997; Willerslev and others, Reference Willerslev2007), 10Bem may be leached in acid liquid water conditions encountered in some soils (with pH <4). The pH of refrozen basal water from the nearby NorthGRIP core is between 5.0 and 5.3 (Christner and others, Reference Christner, Montross and Priscu2012), a priori too high for mobilization of 10Bem. Additionally, the GISP2 subglacial material Bierman and others (Reference Bierman2014) and ice-bound sediment samples of Graly and others (Reference Graly, Corbett, Bierman, Lini and Neumann2018) were analyzed following a similar extraction procedure of removing silt from ice by melting. The GISP2 samples were more than 99% ice as were many of the Graly and others (Reference Graly, Corbett, Bierman, Lini and Neumann2018) samples. The extraction of 10Bem from GISP2 silty ice (Bierman and others, Reference Bierman2014) and subglacial ice-bound silt and sand material (Graly and others, Reference Graly, Corbett, Bierman, Lini and Neumann2018) did not lead to a reduction of the 10Bem concentration to the level observed at NEEM. This reasoning leads us to believe that the NEEM 10Bem data we report here are robust and indicative of active erosion of the bed below and near NEEM over at least two glacial cycles. This inference is consistent with other data we present in this paper as well as the observation that basal temperature at NEEM is −2.4°C (Goossens and others, Reference Goossens2016) not far below the melting point of the local bed (−1.3°C; MacGregor and others, Reference MacGregor2015). It is reasonable to conclude that ice at NEEM was warm-based and erosive at some point in the past.
5.4. Paleoenvironment during previous deglaciation periods
C/N ratios of the sediments of the NEEM BIL range between 20 and 70. Some of these values are significantly higher than the average values of the organic material found in developed soils (10–30; Xu and others, Reference Xu, Thornton and Post2013), and in Holocene-age tundra soils of northern Siberia (10–40; Ernakovich and others, Reference Ernakovich, Wallenstein and Calderón2015). In temperate regions, C/N ratios are known to reflect the degree of degradation of the organic matter and to decrease with depth (e.g. Callesen and others, Reference Callesen, Raulund-Rasmussen, Westman and Tau-Strand2007; Hugelius and others, Reference Hugelius, Kuhry, Tarnocai and Virtanen2010). In this framework, the C/N ratios measured in the NEEM sediments suggest that they originate from the upper layer (0–50 cm) of an immature soil. The reason for soil to be poorly developed could be a short lifetime or a cold environment that would have prevented the organic matter from being degraded, and so that the C/N ratio has remained high (Oelbermann and Voroney, Reference Oelbermann and Voroney2007; Ernakovich and others, Reference Ernakovich, Wallenstein and Calderón2015).
The NEEM C/N ratios agree quite well with the ratios of raw and non-degraded elements of continental higher plants, such as leaf and wood (Fig. 10), suggesting that this organic material is pristine and not degraded. These C/N ratios are also consistent with remains of boreal forest and tundra (Fig. 10), and in particular those of the boreal forest floor that can be as high (up to 40) as those measured in half of the NEEM basal sediments (Callesen and others, Reference Callesen, Raulund-Rasmussen, Westman and Tau-Strand2007; Marty and others, Reference Marty, Houle, Gagnon and Courchesne2017). A boreal forest or tundra environment is moreover consistent with the δ13C NEEM data (that range between −22 and −27‰) and is compatible with C3 land plants (Fig. 10; Meyers, Reference Meyers1994). Finally, paleosol conditions have also been evidenced by the coatings on debris surfaces and wood fossils found among the debris of the BIL (Fig. 5e). It is probable that these grain microfeatures formed synchronously with the development of vegetation during preglacial time or in an interglacial warm period.
The upper C/N value measured in the NEEM basal debris (~70) is compatible with one sample of woody tissue (60–80) recovered in the Camp Century subglacial sediment (Christ and others, Reference Christ2021), and both are significantly higher than the C/N ratios (~10) measured in silty ice from GISP2 (Fig. 10; Bierman and others, Reference Bierman, Shakun, Corbett, Zimmerman and Rood2016). Moreover, our data cover a large range (20–70) compared to the C/N ratios from the BIL of the GISP2 ice core that are more tightly clustered around 10 (Bierman and others, Reference Bierman2014). This discrepancy could be due to a difference in the maturity of the organic material and the paleosols from which it is derived both. Indeed, the hypothesis of Bierman and others (Reference Bierman2014) is that the GISP2 basal material corresponds to a well-developed soil, much more mature than the one observed at NEEM or, to a lesser degree, at Camp Century. This interpretation is also in agreement with the highest 10Bem concentrations measured at GISP2 that are interpreted as indicative of a well-preserved non-eroded paleosol (section 5.3).
If a mature soil did exist at NEEM, it seems to have been eroded and removed by early glacial advances, prior to the current ice-sheet expansion, in agreement with the succession of events determined from our grain morphology analysis. Given the location of GISP2 near the ice-sheet summit, where ice flow is almost null, the basal ice at GISP2 has likely been more stable than the ice at the NEEM location. Only a few tens of kilometers away from GISP2, BIL from the GRIP core contains elevated concentrations of biogenic gases (CO2 and CH4) and organic acids sourced from a local periglacial environment that developed prior to the full ice-sheet build-up (Tison and others, Reference Tison1998; Souchez and others, Reference Souchez2006). Our SEM analysis of grain features at NEEM indicates the occurrence of (at least) two ice-free episodes and two glacial advances at NEEM that agrees with the two ice-free episodes recorded in the Camp Century subglacial sediment (Christ and others, Reference Christ2021). The near-null ice velocity at GISP2 might have preserved the mature soil/paleosol developed before the last glaciation build-up (Bierman and others, Reference Bierman2014) that probably occurred 1 Ma ago (Yau and others, Reference Yau, Bender, Blunier and Jouzel2016a). In agreement with this scenario, gas composition trends in the southern distal core of Dye-3 indicate significant ice motion at this southern distal location (Fig. 1; Verbeke and others, Reference Verbeke, Lorrain, Johnsen and Tison2002), while the record is much more stable at the GRIP location, at the GrIS summit (Souchez and others, Reference Souchez, Janssens, Lemmens and Stauffer1995).
Finally, the C and N data in the NEEM material are consistent with a tundra or taiga paleo-ecosystem, an observation that is consistent with similar analyses of ice core basal materials in Camp Century (Christ and others, Reference Christ2021), with ancient DNA from Dye-3 silty ice (Willerslev and others, Reference Willerslev2007), and with fossils preserved in preglacial sediments (e.g. Funder and others, Reference Funder, Abrahamsen, Bennike and Feyling-Hanssen1985, Reference Funder2001; Drucker and others, Reference Drucker, Hobson, Ouellet and Courtois2010). The fossil wood fragments found here (Fig. 5e) also bear similarity to fossils found in the basal section of Camp Century (Christ and others, Reference Christ2021).
6. Conclusions: past fluctuations of the GrIS at NEEM
Based on this multi-proxy analysis of the NEEM basal ice debris, we propose a history of the BIL debris with four successive stages: (1) initial preglacial conditions of uncertain duration for weathering/soil/paleosol genesis, (2) glacial advance 1, (3) glacial retreat and interglacial conditions with onset of weathering and (4) glacial advance 2 (current ice-sheet development).
According to Goossens and others (Reference Goossens2016), the discrete debris layers visible higher up in the NEEM sequence result from shearing-in/folding of material from a layer of frozen sediments situated on top of bedrock. Our new data allow us to go further in the interpretation of the ice-sheet dynamics at the NEEM location (see schematic process timeline in Fig. 11). SEM-identified microfeatures are the primary data on which we base this interpretation. Indeed, the relationship between weathering (coatings) and glacial abrasion on grains suggests at least four successive stages of ice-sheet comings and goings. This interpretation is supported by C and N concentrations, δ13C and 10Bem data:
(1) Initial stage: preglacial conditions. The presence of weathered grains in the BIL is consistent with the presence of a soil/paleosol layer developed on the local substrate. Although there is no control of the age of organic material found in the NEEM BIL, wood fossils, C/N ratios and δ13C data are consistent with tundra and/or boreal forest vegetation covering the landscape at that time (Fig. 11a).
(2) Glacial advance 1. This first glacial advance not only eroded the weathered soil surface, but also mixed pre-glacial material with more deeply carved and exhumed fresh bedrock (yellow dots in Fig. 11b). This material had then probably been fractured and abraded by glacial plucking, and by transportation with grain-to-grain collisions in flowing ice (Fig. 11b). This scenario of deep (>1 m) regolith exhumation is also attested by the low 10Bem concentrations (~106 atoms/g) measured in the NEEM BIL debris (Fig. 9). We suspect mixing diluted near-surface sediment containing higher 10Bem from weathered grains.
(3) Glacial retreat and interglacial conditions. Ice retreat led to the deposition of debris contained into the BIL as till (Fig. 11c). The most compelling evidence for this ice-free episode is SEM/EDS observations that show thick secondary mineral coatings formed at the surface of some previously crushed grains, which we interpret as subaerial weathering conditions (Fig. 11). Moreover, a soil probably developed on top of this till, with tundra and/or boreal forest vegetation growth according to the C/N and δ13C data.
(4) Glacial advance 2 (current ice-sheet development). The development of the current ice sheet remobilized and incorporated previously weathered debris into the current BIL sequence (brown dots in Fig. 11d) and previously deposited till (yellow dots in Fig. 11d). This stage is supported by SEM analysis, showing the presence of freshly abraded grains, with fractures intersecting more weathered and coated grain surfaces (Figs 4, 11). The till and paleosol sources were once again mixed with fresh and less weathered bedrock materials, that have lower 10Bem concentration (orange dots in Fig. 11d), as supported by the 10Bem vs depth profile (Fig. 8, with the exception of the outlier bottom sample 20 June 4/4). It is worth noting that this mixing was apparently more efficient in the top section of the NEEM BIL, than at the very bottom, where crushed grains from fresh bedrock are dominant.
87Sr/86Sr and ɛ143Nd analyses of NEEM basal debris show that this material is very different from dust sources recorded in the Holocene and Early Pleistocene ice (e.g. Bory and others, Reference Bory, Biscaye and Grousset2003a, Reference Bory, Biscaye, Piotrowski and Steffensen2003b). The specific signature of the NEEM basal debris (Fig. 6) strongly suggests that this material is derived from a rather local bedrock source that probably experienced <200 km lateral transportation (Dahl-Jensen and others, Reference Dahl-Jensen2013). The source of NEEM rock debris is probably the Committee-Melville Archean belt, which crops out on the northwest coast of Greenland (Figs 1, 6). These geochemical data also provide new insights about bedrock heterogeneities of the Greenland island, and may be useful for studies tracking sediment provenances in marine records (e.g. White and others, Reference White2016; Knutz and others, Reference Knutz2019; Christ and others, Reference Christ2020).
Evidence of alternation between deglacial conditions and subsequent glacial advances at NEEM is compatible with observations derived from the analysis of sub-ice sediment recovered closer to the northwestern GrIS margin, and at Camp Century, that evidenced two ice-free episodes since 3 Ma, the latest occurring within the last million year (Christ and others, Reference Christ2021). These observations obtained from the NEEM core are in line with the hypothesis that the northwest margin of the GrIS was probably subject to more waning and waxing events than the central zone of Greenland during the Pleistocene, where 1 Ma old basal ice is preserved at GRIP (Willerslev and others, Reference Willerslev2007; Yau and others, Reference Yau, Bender, Blunier and Jouzel2016a). However, future studies now need to constrain the absolute chronology of these oscillations evidenced in the NEEM basal ice record.
Supplementary material
The supplementary material for this article can be found at 10.24396/ORDAR-103.
Acknowledgements
This work is part of the international consortium for the study of basal-ice involving European (NBI Copenhagen, ULB Brussels, CRPG Nancy) and US (Vermont University, LDEO New York) research groups. P.-H. B. was funded by the program ‘Future Leader’ of Lorraine University of Excellence and by the ANR JC EroMed. We are grateful to two reviewers and to Editor M. Cassado for their constructive comments that improved the submitted version of the manuscript. The Post-Doc of M. P. was jointly financed by CNRS and the ANR JC EroMed program. Laurent Tissandier is kindly thanked for his assistance during the SEM analysis, as well as Florian Deman and David Verstraeten for their welcome in the VUB stable isotopes lab. P. C. thanks VUB Strategic Research and Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) Hercules foundation for instrument support. V. D. thanks the FRS-FNRS for support and the ERC StG ‘ISoSyc’ for past funding. Sabrina Cauchies and Jeroen de Jong are thanked for support in the lab and Sm-Nd-Rb-Sr measurements.
Author contributions
P.-H. B., M. P., J.-L. T., F. P.: study design, ice core samples handling, data production, analysis, writing; M. P. notably realized the detailed SEM analysis, 10Bem and C/N data; D. D.-J., J. P. S.: study design, samples handling, data interpretation; W. C. M.: SEM imagery, data interpretation, writing; P. R. B., A. J. C., L. B. C.: 10Bem data, interpretation, writing; V. D.: Nd and Sr data, interpretation, writing; T. R. and P. C.: C/N data; ASTER Team: 10Be/9Be measurement.