Collaborative Research:
Quaternary Paleoclimatic Evolution, Larsen Basin, Offshore Seymour Island, Eastern
Antarctic Peninsula
Principal Investigators: Martin Lagoe and Ben Sloan
Funded by: National Science Foundation
Quaternary glacial marine deposits of the Larsen Basin are uniquely suited for study of
the modern environmental setting and recent paleoclimatic evolution of the northeastern
Antarctic Peninsula continental shelf, an area thought to exhibit pronounced sensitivity
to climatic changes. Microfossils and their stable isotope signatures from these deposits
provide information on varying oceanographic conditions, ice mass extent, and sediment
dispersal. Questions to be answered include: 1) What are the faunal and isotopic responses
to glaciation, both proximal and distal to the variety of small and medium ice masses in
the area? 2) What is the relationship between physical evidence of ice position, as
expressed in sediments and seismic data, and the faunal and isotopic signatures thereof?
3) To what extent is an environmental model of the highly variable interglacial Modern
shelf applicable to describing and understanding late Quaternary environments
representative of different climatic regimes?
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