Abstract
During the last deglaciation (21 - 7 kaBP), the gradual retreat of
Northern Hemisphere ice sheet margins produced large proglacial lakes.
While the climatic impacts of these lakes have been widely acknowledged,
their role on ice sheet grounding line dynamics has received very little
attention so far. Here, we show that proglacial lakes had dramatic
implications for the North American ice sheet dynamics through a
self-sustained mechanical instability which has similarities with the
known marine ice sheet instability albeit providing fast retreat of
large portions of the ice sheet over the continent. Systematically
reproduced in the latest stage of the deglaciation, this mechanism could
provide a physical origin for the debated melt water pulse 1B. Echoing
our knowledge of Antarctic ice sheet dynamics, they are another
manifestation of the importance of grounding line dynamics for ice sheet
evolution.