Surveys were conducted seaward of all the major drainage outlets of the Antarctic ice sheet from the Pennell Coast, northVictoria Land, to Marguerite Bay, Antarctic Peninsula. The results show that the ice sheet extended onto the outer shelf. Glacial troughs occur offshore of all major glacial outlets.Where the substrate is crystalline bedrock, ice flow tended to follow the structural grain of the bedrock, deposited little sediment and eroded the underlying bedrock. Where ice flowed over relatively soft, more easily eroded, sedimentary strata, the direction of ice flow was more directly offshore, and depositional features characterize the sea-floor. In these areas the signature of the grounded ice consists of till deposits and large-scale geomorphic features. Drumlins occur within the region of contact between crystalline and sedimentary substrates. The different geological substrates are interpreted to have exerted a fundamental control on the behavior of past ice sheets. The troughs in the areas of bedrock composed of sedimentary substrate are interpreted to have been occupied by relatively fast-flowing ice, ice streams, and the troughs in the areas of crystalline substrate are interpreted to have been occupied by slower-moving ice. The area between these two zones was characterized by ice acceleration and is marked by drumlins.
Three research expeditions to the Ross Sea, Antarctica resulted in collection of a dataset of more than 270 km of side-scan and chirp-sonar data, more than 330 km of swath bathymetry and 3.5 kHz data, and 24 cores within a glacially-carved trough. The former ice-stream flow path is divided into six zones, covering a distance of approximately 370 km, distinguished by unique stratigraphic signatures and geomorphic features. An erosional surface with thin, patchy lodgement till characterizes Zone 1. This region is interpreted as having experienced relatively high basal shear stress conditions. Zones 2, 3, and 4 are characterized by an erosional surface and thin, time-transgressive subglacial and grounding-line proximal deposits that include back-stepping moraines, flutes, transverse moraines, and corrugation moraines. These zones represent the transition between erosional and depositional regimes under the expanded LGM ice sheet; material eroded from the inner shelf was transported toward the outer shelf, possibly as a thin deforming till layer. The two outer zones are depositional and include maximum grounding-line (Zone 5) and pro-glacial deposits that were overridden subsequently by the ice sheet (Zone 6). Surface features include mega-scale glacial lineations, corrugation moraines, and iceberg furrows. Ice in these zones is interpreted as having experienced relatively lower basal shear stress, an extensional regime, and faster flow. This advance may have destabilized the ice sheet, initiating local draw-down and production of icebergs that furrowed the sea floor. Corrugation moraines are thought to represent annual retreat moraines, constraining the retreat rate of the ice sheet across the continental shelf to a consistent 40 to 100 m a -1.
While much of the evidence suggests that there was an increase in inequality in the U.S. during the 1980s, the reasons are less evident. Using the U.S. Consumer Expenditure Survey data, we find that the inequality of consumption‐expenditures, as well as the inequality of other measures of resources, widened considerably during the 1980s. While previous studies suggest that increasing inequality is mainly due to increases in within group inequality, we show that by decomposing inequality by the interaction of family type and education almost three‐fourths of the increase in inequality is accounted for by changes in inequality between groups and by shifts in the population.
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