Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6431320 | Journal of South American Earth Sciences | 2016 | 13 Pages |
â¢The last deglaciation history was determined in the Gavidia valley.â¢Deglaciation chronology of the Gavidia valley is related to the Late Mérida Glaciation.â¢A comparison between deglaciation histories from the Mérida Andes is made.
In the Mérida Andes, a detailed deglaciation history reconstruction is difficult to achieve due to scattered deglaciation chronologies available. This paper contributes with 24 exposure ages of glacial landforms sampled in the Gavidia valley. Exposure ages were obtained based on terrestrial cosmogenic nuclide 10Be dating. Results indicate deglaciation mainly occurred between â¼21 ka and 16.5 ka and the complete deglaciation occurred at â¼16.0 ka. The glacier retreated in two different phases. The oldest one occurred since the LGM until middle OtD or the local climate event El Caballo Stadial. The youngest phase occurred at ages younger than â¼16.5 ka until complete deglaciation. A combination of topographic features and changes in the paleoclimate conditions at the end of the El Caballo Stadial seems leaded the fastest former glacier extinction. The topographic feature which seems contributed to the fastest glacier extinction was the low valley bottom slopes. In addition, exposure ages of the Gavidia valley were integrated with deglaciation chronologies from the central Mérida Andes to compare deglaciation histories. Asynchronous deglaciation histories were observed. Local paleotemperatures and paleoprecipitations contrasts, different valleys aspects, insolation and catchments steepness could explain different deglaciation histories.