The ice on Greenland could only form due to processes in the deep Earth
interior. Large-scale glaciations in the Arctic only began about 2.7
million years ago; before that, the northern hemisphere was largely free
of ice for more than 500 million years. Scientists at the German
Research Centre for Geosciences GFZ, Utrecht University, the Geological
Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS) and the University of Oslo could
now explain why the conditions for the glaciation of Greenland only
developed so recently on a geological time scale.
The reason for that is the interaction of three tectonic processes.
For one thing, Greenland had to be lifted up, such that the mountain
peaks reached into sufficiently cold altitudes of the atmosphere.
Secondly, Greenland needed to move sufficiently far northward, which led
to reduced solar irradiation in winter. Thirdly, a shift of the Earth
axis caused Greenland to move even further northward.
Hot rocks underneath Iceland
These glaciations began in the East of Greenland. The authors found
hints in rock samples that the high mountains in the east of Greenland
were only uplifted during the last ten million years, whereby this
process happened especially fast since about 5 million years ago. At
that time, Greenland was still largely free of ice. Seismological
investigations indicate that hot rocks rise underneath Iceland from
Earth's deep mantle. These observations were used as input in computer
models by main author Bernhard Steinberger at the German Research Centre
for Geosciences GFZ. "These hot rocks flow northward beneath the lithosphere, that is, towards eastern Greenland," Steinberger explains. "Because the upwelling beneath Iceland −the Iceland plume − sometimes gets stronger and sometimes weaker, uplift and subsidence can be explained."
Greenland migrating
The seismological investigations also showed that the lithosphere in
the East of Greenland is especially thin -- only about 90 kilometers
thick. Earth scientists Steinberger and colleagues reconstructed the
position of the tectonic plates 60 to 30 million years ago, and found
that the Iceland plume was exactly beneath this part of Greenland during
that time. This explains why the lithosphere is so thin. For that
reason, the eastern part of Greenland could also be more easily
uplifted: Plume material can flow up to a depth of less than 100 km and
therefore lift up the overlying lithosphere comparatively easily.
Whereas the Iceland plume remained in approximately the same position
in Earth mantle, Greenland moved as a tectonic plate, with a northward
component of six degrees of latitude during the past 60 Million years,
towards cooler regions.
Shift of Earth axis
This northward motion was amplified through "True polar wander": "Our
computations show that Earth axis shifted about 12° towards Greeland
during the last 60 million years" GFZ researcher Steinberger says.
Therefore, in combination with the tectonic plate motion, Greenland
moved about 18° northward. It was now sufficiently far north, and its
mountain tops in the East were sufficiently high, such that glaciations
could be initiated.
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