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Geomorphology of Ulu Peninsula, James Ross Island, Antarctica

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journal contribution
posted on 2021-03-08, 13:50 authored by Stephen J. A. Jennings, Bethan J. Davies, Daniel Nývlt, Neil F. Glasser, Zbyněk Engel, Filip Hrbáček, Jonathan L. Carrivick, Bedřich Mlčoch, Michael J. Hambrey

This study presents a 1:25,000 geomorphological map of the northern sector of Ulu Peninsula, James Ross Island, Antarctic Peninsula. The map covers an area of c. 250 km2, and documents the landforms and surficial sediments of one of the largest ice-free areas in Antarctica, based on remote sensing and field-based mapping. The large-scale landscape features are determined by the underlying Cretaceous sedimentary and Neogene volcanic geology, which has been sculpted by overlying ice masses during glacial periods. Paraglacial and periglacial features are superimposed upon remnant glacial features, reflecting the post-glacial evolution of the landscape. The study area can be broadly separated into three geomorphological sectors, according to the dominant contemporary Earth-surface processes; specifically, a glacierised southern sector, a paraglacial-dominated eastern sector, and a periglacial-dominated central/northern sector. This map provides a basis for further interdisciplinary research, and insight into the potential future landscape evolution of other parts of the Antarctic Peninsula as the climate warms.

Funding

This work was supported from Operational Programme Research, Development, and Education - Project Postdoc@MUNI (No. CZ.02.2.69/0.0/0.0/16_027/0008360), by infrastructural projects supporting the operation of the J. G. Mendel Station (LM2015078 and VAN2020/1), and was partly supported by the project NUNANTAR (02/SAICT/2017–32002; Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia, Portugal). Fieldwork was also funded by the UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) under the Antarctic Funding Initiative (NE/F012942/1). Transport, logistics, and fieldwork on James Ross Island for BJD, NFG, JLC, and MJH were supported by the British Antarctic Survey and the Royal Navy, and we thank the captain and crew of the RRS Ernest Shackleton, the RRS James Clark Ross, and HMS Protector for their support.

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