Introduction
In this paper, we describe measurements of the cosmic ray-produced radionuclides 26Al, 10Be and 21Ne from intermittently glaciated bedrock surfaces in the Transantarctic Mountains. These bedrock surfaces are characteristic of much of the landscape of the Transantarctic Mountains in that geomorphic and stratigraphic evidence shows that they were covered by ice at least once in the past, but the bedrock surfaces themselves lack any evidence of glacial modification and display only features associated with subaerial weathering and granular disintegration (e.g. Sugden et al. Reference Sugden, Summerfield, Denton, Wilch, McIntosh, Marchant and Rutford1999, Reference Sugden, Balco, Cowdery, Stone and Sass2005, Sugden & Denton 2004). As this relationship implies a polar climate cold enough to sustain only frozen-based and non-erosive glaciers, the geomorphology of these surfaces provides potential constraints on Cenozoic Antarctic climate and ice sheet change (Sugden et al. Reference Sugden, Summerfield, Denton, Wilch, McIntosh, Marchant and Rutford1999, Sugden & Denton 2004).
The goal of this paper is to attempt to quantify some of these constraints via cosmogenic nuclide measurements. Concentrations of cosmic ray-produced nuclides in rock surfaces reflect a balance between nuclide production during exposure of the surface to cosmic rays, loss of nuclide-enriched surface material due to erosion and, for radionuclides, loss by radioactive decay. The relative importance of these processes varies according to the half-life of the nuclide in question. Thus comparing inventories of different nuclides can help to reconstruct the exposure history of the surface. For example, 26Al and 10Be are produced by cosmic ray bombardment of quartz at a fixed ratio of 26Al/10Be=6.75, but 26Al decays twice as fast as 10Be. Thus, if a quartz sample experiences a single period of surface exposure, 26Al and 10Be concentrations are uniquely related to the exposure time by their production ratio and decay constants. If this period of exposure is interrupted by periods during which the sample is shielded from the cosmic ray flux, the 26Al inventory will decay faster than 10Be during these periods, thus the 26Al/10Be ratio will no longer conform to this relationship. Thus, disequilibrium between 26Al and 10Be concentrations can be used to identify surfaces that have experienced complex exposure histories (Klein et al. Reference Klein, Giegengack, Middleton, Sharma, Underwood and Weeks1986, Nishiizumi et al. Reference Nishiizumi, Lal, Klein, Middleton and Arnold1986, Lal Reference Lal1991).
This idea is important for our purposes here because many bedrock surfaces in glaciated regions show such disequilibrium (e.g. Bierman et al. Reference Bierman, Marsella, Patterson, Davis and Caffee1999, Sugden et al. Reference Sugden, Balco, Cowdery, Stone and Sass2005). Many of the measurements that showed this were originally intended to determine the time these surfaces were exposed by ice retreat during the most recent deglaciation. However, the observations that: i) nuclide concentrations were much higher (in some cases by orders of magnitude) than could have accumulated since ice retreat, and ii) 26Al and 10Be concentrations were not in equilibrium with continuous surface exposure, showed that these surfaces had not experienced significant subglacial erosion. Thus, cosmogenic nuclide concentrations in these surfaces record the integrated effect of not one but many periods of exposure and ice cover. These surfaces are not useful for dating the most recent ice retreat, but can potentially be used to learn about ice sheet history and surface weathering rates over many glacial-interglacial cycles.
This paper describes measurements of the cosmic ray-produced nuclides 26Al (t 1/2=0.7 Ma), 10Be (t 1/2=1.4 Ma) and 21Ne (stable) in quartz from surfaces with geomorphic and stratigraphic evidence, as well as cosmogenic nuclide concentrations, that imply preservation under repeated episodes of cover by frozen-based ice. All the sites have nuclide concentrations that require an exposure history extending over many glacial-interglacial cycles, and many sites show disequilibrium between concentrations of various nuclides. We explore to what extent this information can be used to learn about the history of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet over the past several million years.
Field sites
This paper describes observations from three sites (Fig. 1). Two sites, Mount DeWitt and East Groin, are located in the McMurdo Dry Valleys in Victoria Land near 77°S. The third site is located in the Quartz Hills in the southern Transantarctic Mountains near 86°S. At all three sites, stratigraphic and geomorphic observations showed that all or nearly all of the sample locations were covered by glacier ice at least once, either by expansion of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet or by advances of adjacent glaciers.
Mount DeWitt is a nunatak on the westernmost edge of the Dry Valleys, directly adjacent to the polar plateau of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet (Fig. 2). Bedrock samples were collected between 1880 m and the summit at 2090 m. The bedrock surface consists of weathered carbonaceous sandstone of the Triassic Lashly Formation. Clasts of Ferrar dolerite, a dark mafic intrusive rock that occurs throughout the Dry Valleys, litter the surface (Fig. 3). As this lithology does not outcrop on Mount DeWitt itself, these clasts must be glacially transported. Above 1900 m, the frequency of dolerite erratics decreases notably; erratics are sparse between 1900–2040 m. Further search above 2040 m yielded only one isolated erratic clast directly at the summit. As the summit of Mount DeWitt was occupied for extended periods by researchers maintaining positioning transponders during the Taylor Dome ice coring project, it is possible that this erratic was not naturally present at the summit. Thus, Mount DeWitt was ice-covered at some time in the past to at least 2040 m elevation, but evidence that the summit at 2090 m was ever covered is weak.
East Groin is a sandstone buttress adjacent to lower Taylor Glacier (Figs 4 & 5). Samples collected at this site lay between the modern ice margin at 1380 m and the highest point accessible on foot at 1720 m. The bedrock is quartz arenite sandstone of the Devonian Altar Mountain and Arena Formations. Dolerite clasts, although present at all elevations, are not necessarily diagnostic of ice cover at this site because Ferrar dolerite outcrops above our sample sites. Thus, dolerite clasts at lower elevations could conceivably have been emplaced by rockfall, although the convex form of the buttress makes it unlikely that this process would lead to the observed widespread, sparse and approximately uniform distribution of dolerite clasts. However, large quartzite cobbles derived from conglomerate facies of Beacon group sandstones, which were not observed in outcrop at this site, do indicate transport by ice. In addition, Arena Valley, directly across the Taylor Glacier from this site, contains a moraine sequence that shows that at least 500 m of thickening of Taylor Glacier took place at least once in the past several million years (Brook & Kurz Reference Brook and Kurz1993). Thus, it is most probable that all of our sample sites were covered by expanded Taylor Glacier ice at least once in the past.
The Quartz Hills are a mountainous ice-free area adjacent to Reedy Glacier. Benches and valleys in the Quartz Hills are covered by extensive glacial deposits ranging in age from Holocene to Pliocene or older (Mercer Reference Mercer1968, Bromley et al. Reference Bromley, Hall, Stone, Conway and Todd2010). Granite bedrock samples were collected between 1400 m, near the present ice surface elevation, and 1675 m along a ridge overlooking the confluence of Reedy and Colorado glaciers on the west side of the ‘Quartz Hills bench’ (Bromley et al. Reference Bromley, Hall, Stone, Conway and Todd2010) (Figs 6, 7). The toe of the ridge is covered by Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) aged glacial drift deposited 14–17 ka (Todd et al. Reference Todd, Stone, Conway, Hall and Bromley2010), and the lowest sample (03-RDY-096-QZH; 1400 m elevation) was collected from a rock buttress projecting from this drift 10 m below its upper limit. A thin scatter of cobbles associated with the older Reedy B drift, which is believed to have been emplaced during marine isotope stage 6 at 140–160 ka (Bromley et al. Reference Bromley, Hall, Stone, Conway and Todd2010), extends to c. 1460 m elevation, 10 m above the second-lowest sample (03-RDY-095-QZH; 1448 m elevation). No erratics are present directly on the bedrock ridge above the Reedy B drift, but all of our samples lie below the mapped upper limit of Reedy D and E drifts on the adjacent bench (these drifts are>3.5 Ma and>4.5 Ma, respectively; Bromley et al. Reference Bromley, Hall, Stone, Conway and Todd2010). Thus, all of the sample sites must have been ice-covered when these drifts were emplaced.
Despite evidence for ice cover at all sites, none of the sampled bedrock surfaces show any evidence of subglacial erosion. Striations, polish, streamlining, plucking or any other features characteristic of glacial erosion are absent. In contrast, all sites show surface features characteristic of extended weathering under ice-free conditions, including weathering rinds, granular disintegration, frost-shattering, weathering pits, and fragile, cavernous forms (Figs 3, 4, 5 & 7). Thus, geomorphic observations indicate that these bedrock surfaces have been subject to slow subaerial weathering during ice-free periods, but not to subglacial erosion during periods of ice cover. As we will show later, cosmogenic nuclide concentrations are consistent with this conclusion.
Analytical methods
Physical and chemical preparation of quartz samples was carried out by the authors in the Cosmogenic Nuclide Lab at the University of Washington. This involved isolation of quartz from crushed rock samples by repeated etching in dilute hyrodfluoric acid (HF), extraction of Be and Al using standard methods of HF dissolution and column chromatography (Stone 2001), and total Al concentrations were measured by inductively coupled plasma (ICP) optical emission spectrophotometry of an aliquot of the dissolved quartz-HF solution. Be and Al isotope ratios were measured by accelerator mass spectrometry at both the Center for Accelerator Mass Spectrometry, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL-CAMS; Quartz Hills samples) and the Purdue Rare Isotope Measurement Laboratory (PRIME Lab; Mount DeWitt and East Groin samples). The 26Al and 10Be concentrations are shown in Table I. The 9Be carrier was a commercially available Be ICP standard solution. For samples measured at PRIME, full carrier and process blanks had 277 000±77 000 atoms 10Be, in all cases<0.5% of the total number of 10Be atoms in the sample, and 230 000±93 000 atoms 26Al, in all cases<0.2% of the total number of atoms in the sample. For samples measured at LLNL-CAMS, full carrier and process blanks had 66 000±28 000 atoms 10Be, in all cases<0.3% of the total number of atoms in the sample, and 65 000±40 000 atoms 26Al, in all cases<0.2% of the total number of atoms in the sample.
†Normalized to the Be isotope ratio standards of Nishiizumi et al. (2007), ‡normalized to the isotope ratio standards of Nishiizumi (Reference Nishiizumi2004), # 21Ne not accounted for by trapped Ne of atmospheric composition. Includes both cosmogenic and nucleogenic 21Ne; §reflects subtraction of estimated nucleogenic 21Ne reflects concentration from measured excess 21Ne concentration. ¥Complete results of step-degassing Ne analyses appear in a supplemental table.
Ne was extracted from aliquots of the same HF-etched quartz samples in the Noble Gas Thermochronometry Lab of the Berkeley Geochronology Center by encapsulating the sample in a Ta packet and heating it under vacuum with a 75 W, 810 nm diode laser. The released Ne was analysed on a MAP-215 mass spectrometer using a method that employs an 39Ar spike to correct for isobaric interferences on masses 20 and 22 (Balco & Shuster Reference Balco and Shuster2009a). The Ne isotope ratios in all heating steps were consistent with two-component mixing between atmospheric and cosmogenic Ne, i.e. they were not distinguishable at 95% confidence from the atmospheric-cosmogenic mixing line (Niedermann et al. Reference Niedermann, Graf and Marti1993). However, quartz from Beacon Group sandstones in the Dry Valleys is known to contain nucleogenic 21Ne produced by the reaction 18O(α,n)21Ne as a result of uranium and thorium decay. Both Middleton et al. (Reference Middleton, Ackert and Mukhopadhyay2012) and Balco et al. (2011) found, at different sites, that quartz in Beacon Group sandstones contained 7.7×106 atoms g -1 nucleogenic 21Ne. Given the high total 21Ne concentrations and characteristic measurement precision for the samples in this study, this amount of nucleogenic 21Ne is not sufficient to recognizably displace measured Ne isotope ratios from the atmospheric-cosmogenic mixing line. Thus, we calculated cosmogenic 21Ne concentrations by i) first computing excess 21Ne relative to atmospheric composition, and then ii) subtracting 7.7±2.4×106 atoms g -1 from this amount (the uncertainty estimate for the nucleogenic 21Ne concentration is from Middleton et al. (Reference Middleton, Ackert and Mukhopadhyay2012)). The samples from the Quartz Hills are not Beacon Group sandstones; therefore, this is probably not an accurate estimate of the nucleogenic 21Ne concentration in these samples. However, this amount of nucleogenic 21Ne would be at most 2.5% of the total excess 21Ne concentration in any sample from the Quartz Hills. Thus, we accept even a large uncertainty in our estimate of nucleogenic 21Ne for these samples as negligible relative to measurement uncertainty. Summary 21Ne concentrations are presented in Table I and complete results of the step-degassing analyses are shown in Table S1 (found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0954102014000261).
Production rates and decay constants
Production rates for 10Be due to spallation were computed using the global calibration dataset and ‘St’ scaling scheme of Balco et al. (Reference Balco, Stone, Lifton and Dunai2008), the assumed spallogenic production ratios 26Al/10Be, 21Ne/10Be and 21Ne/26Al were 6.75, 4.08 and 0.61, respectively (Balco & Shuster Reference Balco and Shuster2009a). The decay constants for 26Al and 10Be used were 9.83 x 10-7 and 4.99 x 10-7, respectively (Nishiizumi Reference Nishiizumi2004, Chmeleff et al. Reference Chmeleff, von Blanckenburg, Kossert and Jakob2009, Korschinek et al. 2010). Balco & Shuster (Reference Balco and Shuster2009b) showed that this set of production ratios and decay constants, if not yet incontrovertibly correct, are at least internally consistent. Note that our conclusions rely primarily on these estimates of production ratios and decay constants, and are very weakly dependent on the actual magnitude of production rates. Thus, recent work (e.g. Balco et al. Reference Balco, Briner, Finkel, Rayburn, Ridge and Schaefer2009) showing that the actual 10Be production rates predicted by the global calibration dataset of Balco et al. (Reference Balco, Stone, Lifton and Dunai2008) are probably inaccurate at the c. 5–10% level has a negligible effect on our conclusions. The 26Al and 10Be production by muons was computed using the method of Heisinger et al. (Reference Heisinger, Lal, Jull, Kubik, Ivy-Ochs, Neumaier, Knie, Lazarev and Nolte2002b, Reference Heisinger, Lal, Jull, Kubik, Ivy-Ochs, Knie and Nolte2002a) as implemented in Balco et al. (Reference Balco, Stone, Lifton and Dunai2008). Production of 21Ne by muons has not been directly measured. However, Balco et al. (unpublished) found that cosmogenic 21Ne concentrations in a deep sandstone core were consistent with muon interaction cross-sections estimated by Fernandez-Mosquera et al. (Reference Fernandez-Mosquera, Hahm and Marti2010). Thus, these cross-sections were adopted. It is important to note that because the samples in this study have very high concentrations of spallogenic 26Al, 10Be, and 21Ne, concentrations of these nuclides due to muon production are small by comparison, and even large uncertainties in estimating production rates due to muons have a negligible effect on any of our conclusions.
Results
Measured 26Al, 10Be and 21Ne concentrations appear in Table I.
Discussion
Table II and Fig. 8 represent nuclide concentrations as apparent exposure ages or as apparent erosion rates. An ‘apparent exposure age’ is the exposure age calculated assuming a single period of continuous exposure at zero erosion, and an ‘apparent erosion rate’ is the surface erosion rate implied by the nuclide concentration given the assumption of continuous steady erosion for long enough that nuclide concentrations have reached equilibrium between production and loss by surface erosion and radioactive decay. In addition, Figs 9, 10 & 11 show normalized two-nuclide diagrams for the three nuclide pairs 26Al-10Be, 21Ne-10Be and 21Ne-26Al.
Key features of the data
High elevation samples at Dry Valleys sites are consistent with steady surface erosion and production-decay-erosion equilibrium. At higher elevation sites at both Mount DeWitt (above 1900 m) and East Groin (above 1400 m), apparent exposure ages vary between different nuclides, but apparent erosion rates are indistinguishable (Fig. 8). In other words, concentrations of all three nuclides in these samples are not consistent with the hypothesis that these surfaces have experienced a single period of exposure at zero erosion, but they are consistent with the hypothesis that the surfaces have been eroding steadily for a long enough time that nuclide concentrations have reached an equilibrium between production and loss by radioactive decay and surface erosion. As evident from Figs 9, 10 & 11, this is equivalent to observing that these samples lie on the steady erosion line with respect to all three nuclide pairs. Thus, the simplest explanation for these results is that these surfaces have been experiencing steady erosion at 0.5–1.5 m Ma-1 for a long time. How long a period of steady erosion is implied? The rate at which surface nuclide concentrations approach equilibrium with steady erosion depends on both the erosion rate and the decay constant of the nuclide in question. An effective half-life for equilibration with steady erosion is given by -1n (1/2)/(λ i + ε/Λ), where λ i is the decay constant for nuclide i (a -1), ε is the erosion rate (g cm-2 a -1), and Λ is the effective attenuation length for spallogenic production (here taken to be 160 g cm-2). These effective half-lives are 0.2–1 Ma for this range of erosion rates and nuclides, thus 1–4 Ma would be required to reach 95% of the equilibrium value. Therefore, there is no evidence that any of these sites were covered by ice during the past 1–4 Ma. The strength of this constraint is discussed later.
Low elevation samples at Dry Valleys sites require periods of ice cover. Low elevation sites at Mount DeWitt (one site at 1878 m) and East Groin (four sites between 1314–1382 m) show neither apparent exposure ages nor apparent erosion rates that are concordant between nuclides (Fig. 8). In other words, nuclide concentrations are neither consistent with continuous surface exposure at zero erosion nor with steady erosion. These samples lie outside the continuous exposure field on all three two-nuclide diagrams, in the region of intermittent exposure (Figs 9, 10 & 11). Thus, these sites have experienced at least one period of ice cover during their exposure history.
High elevation samples at the Quartz Hills display production-erosion equilibrium for 26Al and 10Be, but not for 21Ne. At all sites in the Quartz Hills, apparent exposure ages differ significantly between all three nuclides, indicating that these sites have not experienced continuous surface exposure at zero erosion. However, apparent erosion rates derived from 26Al and 10Be are i) indistinguishable from each other and ii) significantly different from the apparent 21Ne erosion rate. This is most simply explained if these surfaces have been continuously exposed and subject to steady erosion for a sufficient length of time that 26Al and 10Be concentrations have reached equilibrium with steady erosion, but 21Ne concentrations have not. This is also evident on the two-nuclide diagrams: nuclide concentrations in these samples lie on the steady erosion line in the 26Al-10Be diagram, but lie between the simple exposure and steady erosion lines in 26Al-21Ne and 10Be-21Ne diagrams. At the erosion rates implied by the 26Al and 10Be concentrations (c. 0.1 m Ma -1) the effective half-lives for 26Al and 10Be equilibration with steady erosion are 0.6 Ma and 1 Ma, respectively. Therefore, 3–4 Ma is required for 26Al and 10Be concentrations to become indistinguishable from erosional steady state. However, erosion rates of these surfaces are low enough that a significant fraction of loss of 26Al and 10Be from the surface is the result of radioactive decay, not erosion. Since 21Ne is stable, it can only be lost by erosion, thus the effective half-life for 21Ne equilibration with steady erosion at the erosion rate implied by the 26Al and 10Be concentrations is 4 Ma, much longer than for 26Al or 10Be. Thus, c. 15–20 Ma would be required before 21Ne concentrations were indistinguishable from production-erosion equilibrium. In other words, the 21Ne concentrations retain a memory of the time these sites were first exposed, but 26Al and 10Be concentrations do not. If we assume a single period of continuous surface exposure at a steady erosion rate, with negligible production by muons, we can estimate both the exposure age and erosion rate of these samples by solving the (overdetermined) system of equations:
for the erosion rate ε (g cm-2 a -1) and the exposure time t (a), where N i is the concentration (atoms g -1) and P i is the surface production rate (atoms g -1 a -1) of nuclide i. Because, as described above, stratigraphic and geomorphic evidence shows that these sites were covered by ice at least once, these assumptions imply that the duration of ice cover was short relative to the total duration of exposure.
The system of equations was solved for each sample using the non-linear least squares algorithm in MATLAB, and uncertainties estimated via a 200-iteration Monte Carlo simulation (Fig. 12). The results indicate that nuclide concentrations at all sites can be explained if these surfaces were originally exposed between 4–6 Ma (with nominal 68% confidence bounds on each age estimate of±0.25–0.4 Ma; see Fig. 12), and have been eroding at 3–12 cm Ma -1 since that time (given rock density of 2.7 g cm-3). Surface exposure ages computed in this way are consistent with apparent exposure ages>4 Ma on boulders from Reedy E drift (Bromley et al. Reference Bromley, Hall, Stone, Conway and Todd2010), and thus with a scenario in which initial exposure of bedrock surfaces at this site was coincident with emplacement of the Reedy E drift.
The Monte Carlo uncertainty analysis shows that exposure ages estimated in this way scatter more than expected from measurement uncertainty alone (χ2=48 for 6 degrees of freedom). This is probably due to two factors: first, the assumption of continuous exposure at a steady erosion rate is an oversimplification; a time-varying erosion rate or periods of cover by till could cause this assumption to fail. Second, we have disregarded stratigraphic evidence showing that these sites were, in fact, covered by ice for at least a short time. As noted by Mukhopadhyay et al. (Reference Mukhopadhyay, Ackert, Pope, Pollard and DeConto2012) and others, one can easily construct exposure histories that include short periods of ice cover but yield nuclide concentrations that could be the result of continuous surface exposure. However, the fact that ice cover is not required to explain the observed nuclide concentrations shows that the duration of ice cover at these sites was short relative to their total exposure history. ‘Short’ in this context means thousands to tens of thousands of years; order 1–2% of the total exposure history. Furthermore, because of the geometric requirement that if higher elevation sites are covered by ice then lower elevation sites must also be covered, the fact that there is no relationship between site elevation and exposure age or erosion rate computed in this way is not consistent with a significant duration of ice cover as a source for the scatter in inferred exposure ages. To summarize, despite geomorphic evidence that all sites were covered by ice at least once in the past, the simplest explanation for the observed nuclide concentrations is that these surfaces were first exposed 4–6 Ma and have been eroding at 3–10 cm Ma -1 since that time, with periods of ice cover restricted to a total duration of thousands to tens of thousands of years.
Finally, it is worth noting that these are extraordinarily low erosion rates by global standards. In fact, disregarding ice cover in estimating exposure ages and erosion rates from Eqs (1)–(3) leads to overestimation of erosion rates, thus these are maximum limiting erosion rates under any assumptions.
Constraints on ice cover history
Samples that display nuclide concentrations that are not in equilibrium with continuous surface exposure at any erosion rate must have been covered by ice for a significant fraction of their history. On the other hand, nuclide concentrations that are consistent with simple exposure do not completely exclude any ice cover of the site in the past. If episodes of ice cover were short relative to the total exposure history or if ice cover took place long enough ago that the majority of the present nuclide inventory was produced after ice cover ended, then nuclide concentrations would not be perturbed enough to be detectable. Our dataset must reflect one or both of these situations, because many samples are from sites where geological evidence requires ice cover at some time in the past, but have nuclide concentrations consistent with continuous surface exposure. This includes samples from between 1920 and 2040 m elevation at Mount DeWitt, all samples from the Quartz Hills, and samples from above 1400 m at East Groin. For one thing, this is important because it highlights the fact that nuclide concentrations that show consistency with continuous surface exposure cannot be used to prove that sample sites were never covered by ice. A few thousand years of ice cover at the LGM, for example, would not detectably perturb 26Al and 10Be concentrations in bedrock surfaces that already had a long exposure history. To explore this issue further we have to address two questions: first, for the samples that have 26Al, 10Be and 21Ne concentrations consistent with simple exposure but geological evidence for ice cover, what limits can be placed on the timing and duration of past ice cover? Second, for the samples that have nuclide concentrations requiring significant ice cover, what sort of ice cover histories are consistent with the nuclide concentrations? As discussed by Bierman et al. (Reference Bierman, Marsella, Patterson, Davis and Caffee1999) and many others subsequently, these questions do not have unique answers. As the nuclide concentrations reflect the total integrated exposure and burial of the surfaces, many ice cover histories that differ in the number, duration and time of burial and exposure periods can yield the same nuclide concentrations. Thus, we will use the approach of proposing simple scenarios of ice sheet change and exploring under what conditions they are compatible with the observed nuclide concentrations.
Samples from between 1920 and 2040 m elevation at Mount DeWitt, all samples from the Quartz Hills and samples from above 1400 m at East Groin have nuclide concentrations that can be explained by continuous surface exposure. However, geological evidence shows that these sites were covered by ice at some point. Therefore, how long could these sites have been covered by ice without causing nuclide concentrations to be detectably out of equilibrium with continuous surface exposure? Because radioactive decay and surface erosion tend to efface evidence of past ice cover, the longer ago the period of burial, the longer the duration of burial can be and still satisfy this condition.
To explore this question, we will assume the following. First, the rock surface at a sample site has been steadily eroding at an erosion rate ε (g cm-2 a -1) for a sufficient time for the nuclide concentrations to reach production-decay-erosion equilibrium. At this point, nuclide concentrations are as follows:
Although we consider only spallogenic production for 26Al and 10Be, we separately consider production by muons for 21Ne. This is because at low erosion rates, muon-produced 10Be and 26Al produced at depth is mostly lost to radioactive decay by the time it gets to the surface, thus 26Al and 10Be produced by muons is negligible by comparison with that due to spallation. This is not necessarily the case for a stable nuclide (see Balco & Shuster Reference Balco and Shuster2009a). Thus, P 21,sp , P 21,μ - , and P 21,μ fast are surface production rates (atoms g -1 yr -1) of 21Ne by spallation, negative muon capture and fast muon interactions, respectively. For this purpose we approximate the depth dependence of muon production by a simple exponential relationship and define Λ μ- (1510 g cm-2) and Λ μfast (4360 g cm-2) to be effective attenuation lengths for negative muon capture and fast muon interactions (Heisinger et al. Reference Heisinger, Lal, Jull, Kubik, Ivy-Ochs, Knie and Nolte2002a, Reference Heisinger, Lal, Jull, Kubik, Ivy-Ochs, Neumaier, Knie, Lazarev and Nolte2002b). The sample is covered by ice at a time t 0 (years before present) and remains covered for a duration t b (years) (see Fig. 13). It is then exposed again and continues to erode at a rate ε until the present time. With these conditions the nuclide concentrations observed at the present time are:
Given typical measurement precision for these nuclides of 3%, we now assume that disequilibrium with continuous surface exposure would be detectable if the observed ratio of two nuclides was 3% lower than the equilibrium ratio. For a particular value of ε, we ask what combinations of t 0 and t b would satisfy this condition, i.e. be detectable at the present time? For the 10Be-21Ne nuclide pair, for example, this is the same as specifying a value of ε and finding the set of (t 0,t b ) pairs that satisfy N 10 N 21,eq /N 10,eq N 21=0.97. This nuclide pair is the slowest to return to its production-decay-erosion equilibrium after a period of burial; therefore, it gives the strongest constraints on the duration of past periods of ice cover.
The results of this exercise are shown in Fig. 13. It is important to note that a minimum of 60 000 years of continuous ice cover is required for the 10Be/21Ne ratio to decrease by 3% from the initial equilibrium ratio (the corresponding figures for 26Al/10Be and 26Al/21Ne are 60 000 and 30 000 years, respectively). Thus, a single period of ice cover shorter than this value would not be detectable under this criterion. Again, this highlights that nuclide concentrations that are not measurably out of equilibrium with continuous exposure may not be used to prove that a rock surface has never been covered by ice. Further, these results show that when the erosion rate is relatively high, e.g. 1 m Ma -1, the observation of two-nuclide equilibrium is not very restrictive; only a relatively short time is required for nuclide concentrations to return to near-equilibrium values. For example, samples at higher elevations at Mount DeWitt and East Groin, where concentrations of all three nuclides are in equilibrium with steady erosion, indicate surface erosion rates of 0.5–1.5 m Ma -1. At these erosion rates, the observation of equilibrium nuclide concentrations can exclude long periods of ice cover only in the past 1–2 Ma (Fig. 13). Even very long episodes of glacier thickening prior to that time would not be detectable. At the Quartz Hills, as discussed in the previous section, higher nuclide concentrations probably imply lower erosion rates of 5–10 cm Ma -1. Because erosion rates are lower, these sites can potentially record disequilibrium induced by long periods of ice cover for a much longer time; an episode of ice cover sustained for c. 0.1 Ma could potentially be detectable after c. 1 Ma. Thus, the Quartz Hills sites provide strong evidence that, despite clear geological evidence for occasional thickening of Reedy Glacier, these episodes were rare and short-lived during the Pleistocene.
Low elevation samples at East Groin and Mount DeWitt have nuclide concentrations that cannot be explained by continuous surface exposure and thus require episodes of ice cover. These samples have probably experienced numerous periods of alternating surface exposure and burial beneath cold-based ice, such that the total duration of ice cover makes up a significant fraction of their total exposure history. For the East Groin sample sites, this is implied by moraines and glacial drift at many nearby sites adjacent to the Taylor Glacier that record glacier thickening and thinning, probably on a 100 000-year glacial-interglacial cycle (e.g. Brook & Kurz Reference Brook and Kurz1993, Higgins et al. Reference Higgins, Hendy and Denton2000). Presumably, such cyclical glacier changes occurred during much of the Pleistocene and perhaps Pliocene. A straightforward way to evaluate whether a scenario of periodic, glacial-interglacial ice sheet change is consistent with our measurements is to hypothesize that surface nuclide concentrations have reached a dynamic steady state such that nuclide production during ice-free periods is balanced by nuclide loss by radioactive decay and surface erosion during ice-free periods; i.e. surface nuclide concentrations vary cyclically, but always return to the same value at the same point in a glacial-interglacial cycle. Given this hypothesis, as well as the assumptions that: i) each glacial-interglacial cycle can be characterized by a constant cycle duration (t c, here assumed to be 100 000 years) and a fraction of that period (f b , dimensionless) during which the surface is ice-covered and ii) there is no subglacial erosion, nuclide concentrations at the beginning of a glacial period are given by:
It is necessary to consider, at least approximately, production by muons for 21Ne but not for the radionuclides. Note that we compute the equilibrium nuclide concentration for the beginning of a glacial period, to be consistent with the idea that Taylor Glacier thickens during interglacials (Higgins et al. Reference Higgins, Hendy and Denton2000). For each pair of nuclides, the corresponding pairs of equations can be solved for values of the surface erosion rate during ice-free periods ε (g cm2 a -1) and the fraction of each glacial cycle spent covered by ice f b . Of course, it would also be possible to search for values of these two parameters that best fit all three nuclide concentrations simultaneously. However, that would discard information regarding changes in the extent of glaciation over time that can potentially be gained by considering the nuclide pairs separately.
Equations (10)–(12) were solved for samples at Mount DeWitt and East Groin using the non-linear least squares algorithm in MATLAB, and used a linear error propagation approximation with numerical partial differentiation to estimate the uncertainties in inferred values of f b attributable to measurement uncertainty in nuclide concentrations. The results are shown in Fig. 14. For samples whose nuclide concentrations are in equilibrium with continuous surface exposure (i.e. they plot in the region of continuous exposure on Figs 9, 10 & 11) solving these equations must yield f b =0 within measurement uncertainty for all nuclide pairs. As discussed above, this is the case for all but the lowest sample at Mount DeWitt and for samples from above 1400 m at East Groin. If the scenario implied by Eqs (10)–(12) is correct, f b must be greater for samples at lower elevations because the ice sheet cannot advance over higher sites without also covering the lower sites. This is the case at both Mount DeWitt and East Groin. At Mount DeWitt this calculation implies that the lowest site was ice-covered for c. 20–40% of each glacial-interglacial cycle, but the adjacent site 50 m higher was almost never covered by ice. At East Groin, f b values computed from each nuclide pair are similar among closely spaced samples and, as expected, higher at lower elevations. The lowest two sites (near 1320 m) at East Groin were covered by ice for c. 50% of each cycle, and the two next highest sites (near 1390 m) were covered by ice 5–40% of the time. Thus, our observations at Mount DeWitt and East Groin are consistent with the hypothesis that the observed nuclide concentrations in low elevation samples reflect an equilibrium between production during ice-free periods and loss by radioactive decay and surface erosion during interglaciations under a scenario of repeated, periodic glacial-interglacial cycles spanning the Pleistocene.
For the lowest four samples at East Groin and the lowest sample at Mount DeWitt, values of f b obtained by solving Eqs (10)–(12) vary systematically among nuclide pairs: 26Al-10Be pairs imply higher values of f b than 26Al-21Ne and 10Be-21Ne pairs. A possible explanation for this relies on the fact that nuclides with shorter half-lives reach equilibrium with a periodic exposure-burial history more rapidly. Therefore, the systematic offset among values of f b inferred from the various nuclide pairs would be due to the fact that sites were, on average, less commonly covered by ice during the longer time period ‘remembered’ by the 26Al-21Ne and 10Be-21Ne pairs than during the shorter time period recorded by the 26Al-10Be pair. In other words, this explanation would imply an overall increase in the frequency and/or duration of periods of ice cover in the past several million years. For example, the sample at 1314 m at East Groin has values of f b of 0.67, 0.6 and 0.5 inferred from the 26Al-10Be, 26Al-21Ne and 10Be-21Ne pairs, respectively. One can reproduce this result by assuming that: i) the bedrock surface eroded at 0.5 m Ma-1 when it was ice free, and did not erode when it was ice-covered, ii) at 2.5 Ma, nuclide concentrations had reached equilibrium (as defined by Eqs (10)–(12)) with repeated glacial-interglacial cycles consisting of 10 000 years of ice cover and 90 000 years of exposure, and iii) between 2.5 Ma and the present, the relative duration of ice cover gradually increased so that the most recent cycle consisted of 80 000 years of ice cover and 20 000 years of exposure. Although this is only one of many possible ice cover scenarios that would explain these observations, the idea that we infer lower values of f b from nuclide pairs that take longer to equilibrate is in general agreement with the idea that ice volume changes had higher amplitude in the late Pleistocene than in the early Pleistocene or Pliocene.
Conclusions
In Beacon Group sandstone bedrock surfaces at two sites in the Dry Valleys, 26Al, 10Be and 21Ne concentrations are most easily explained by the following scenario. First, sites at high elevations: i) were rarely covered by ice, ii) have not been significantly subglacially eroded when covered by ice, and iii) have been steadily and slowly eroding at rates of 0.5–1.5 m Ma -1 for at least 1–4 Ma when not covered by ice. Second, sites within c. 100 m above the present ice surface elevation experienced similar surface erosion rates when ice-free, but have been repeatedly covered by cold-based glacier ice during many glacial-interglacial cycles. Sites near the present-day margin of the Taylor Glacier have been covered by ice around half of the time. Furthermore, differences in the characteristic frequency and/or duration of ice cover inferred from nuclide pairs that reach equilibrium at different rates is consistent with a Pliocene-to-present increase in the fraction of the time these sites have been covered by ice. Apparent surface erosion rates of 0.5–1.5 m Ma -1, which appear to reflect the relative erodibility of Beacon Group sandstones in the Dry Valleys region, imply that the cosmogenic nuclide concentrations at these sites do not record events significantly predating the Pleistocene.
Nuclide concentrations in granite bedrock at the Quartz Hills, in contrast, have not reached production-erosion equilibrium and show that sites have been covered by ice for an insignificant fraction of their total exposure history. Results from these sites are most easily explained by 4–6 Ma exposure at erosion rates of 5–10 cm Ma -1. The order of magnitude difference in erosion rates between the sandstone sites in the Dry Valleys and the Quartz Hills is presumably the result of either more resistant bedrock, a colder or more arid climate, or both. Regardless, the low-erosion-rate sites in the Quartz Hills preserve a longer record of exposure.
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the National Science Foundation under grants OPP-0838958 (Balco), OPP-0443535 (Balco), OPP-0229314 (Stone), OPP-0636818 (Stone), and by the Ann and Gordon Getty Foundation. Jaakko Putkonen and Dan Morgan assisted with fieldwork and sample collection in the Dry Valleys. Brenda Hall, Gordon Bromley and Howard Conway assisted with fieldwork and mapping at Reedy Glacier. David Shuster and Tim Becker assisted with the 21Ne measurements. Bob Finkel and Dylan Rood assisted with AMS measurements at LLNL-CAMS. Two anonymous reviewers were extremely helpful in improving some aspects of the text.
Supplementary material
A supplemental table will be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0954102014000261.