posted on 2025-08-19, 11:47authored byGJG Paxman, SSR Jamieson, N Ross, MJ Bentley, CM Carter, TA Jordan, X Cui, S Lang, DE Sugden, MJ Siegert
Antarctic bed topography influences how the overlying ice sheet responds to climate change and provides a record of long-term glacial history. However, knowledge of the processes that governed the development of the landscape before glacial inception and how this modulated subsequent ice-sheet evolution remains limited. Here we use radio-echo sounding to reveal extensive flat surfaces beneath the ice margin between Princess Elizabeth Land and George V Land, East Antarctica. When their elevations are isostatically adjusted for unloading of the present-day ice load, these surfaces cluster at 200–450 metres above sea level and dip gently in an offshore direction. We show that the surfaces are fragments of a once-contiguous coastal plain formed by fluvial erosion, which dates from between the separation of East Antarctica from Australia (~100–80 Ma) and the onset of Southern Hemisphere ice-sheet glaciation (~34 Ma). The preservation of these landforms indicates a lack of intense, selective erosion of the surfaces throughout Antarctica’s glacial history. Fast-flowing ice has instead been directed through inherited tectonic structures and fluvial valleys, leading to the incision of overdeepened subglacial troughs between the flat surfaces and thus modulating the responsiveness of the ice sheet to climate change.
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Data availability:
The radio-echo sounding bed pick data used in this study are available via WISE-ISODYN, ICECAP, CHINARE and OIB. Other geospatial datasets used in this study are available via BedMachine Antarctica, MEaSUREs Antarctic ice velocity, isostatic response to ice-sheet unloading, Copernicus Global 90 m digital elevation model, basal thermal state derived from RES74 and ISSM basal thermal state output. The Copernicus/ESA Sentinel-2b images shown in Extended Data Fig. 4 were acquired free of charge from the Copernicus Open Access Hub (https://scihub.copernicus.eu/). The datasets generated as part of this study, including the database of East Antarctic flat surfaces, are available via Zenodo at https://doi.org/10.5281/ZENODO.11367659