Because of issues concerning global climate change, the Antarctic Peninsula and adjacent parts of the
Weddell Sea and its Pacific
continental shelf have been the subject of intensive geologic, paleontologic, and paleoclimatic research by interdisciplinary and multinational groups over the last several decades. The combined study of the
glaciology of its
ice sheet and the
paleontology,
sedimentology,
stratigraphy,
structural geology, and
volcanology of
glacial and nonglacial deposits of the Antarctic Peninsula has allowed the reconstruction of the
paleoclimatology and prehistoric ice sheet fluctuation of it for over the last 100 million years. This research shows the dramatic changes in climate, which have occurred within this region after it reached its approximate position within the Antarctic Circle during the
Cretaceous Period. The
Fossil Bluff Group, which outcrops within
Alexander Island, provides a detailed record, which includes
paleosols and
fossil plants, of Middle Cretaceous (
Albian) terrestrial climates. The
sediments that form the Fossil Bluff Group accumulated within a
volcanic island arc, which now forms the
bedrock backbone of the Antarctic Peninsula, in prehistoric
floodplains and
deltas and offshore as
submarine fans and other marine sediments. As reflected in the plant fossils, paleosols, and climate models, the climate was warm, humid, and seasonally dry. According to climate models, the summers were dry and winters were wet. The rivers were perennial and subject to intermittent flooding as the result of heavy rainfall. Warm high-latitude climates reached a peak during the mid-Late Cretaceous
Cretaceous Thermal Maximum. Plant fossils found within the Late Cretaceous (
Coniacian and
Santonian-early
Campanian) strata of the Hidden Lake and Santa Maria formations, which outcrop within
James Ross,
Seymour, and adjacent islands, indicate that this emergent volcanic island arc enjoyed warm temperate or
subtropical climates with adequate moisture for growth and without extended periods of below freezing winter temperatures. After the peak warmth of the Cretaceous thermal maximum the climate, both regionally and globally, appears to have cooled as seen in the Antarctic fossil wood record. Later, warm high-latitude climates returned to the Antarctic Peninsula region during the
Paleocene and early
Eocene as reflected in fossil plants. Abundant plant and marine fossils from Paleogene marine sediments that outcrop on Seymour Island indicate the presence of cool and moist, high-latitudes environment during the early Eocene.
sedimentation at the margin of an ice-covered continent during
interglacial The
deglaciation of the Antarctic Peninsula largely occurred between 18,000 and 6,000 years ago as an
interglacial climate was established in the region. It initially started about 18,000 to 14,000 years ago with retreat of the ice sheet from the Pacific outer continental shelf and the continental margin within the Weddell Sea. Within the Weddell Sea, the transition from grounded ice to a floating ice shelf occurred about 10,000 years ago. The deglaciation of some locations within the Antarctic Peninsula continued until 4,000 to 3,000 years ago. Within the Antarctic Peninsula, an interglacial climatic optimum occurred about 3,000 to 5,000 years ago. After the climate optimum, a distinct climate cooling, which lasted until historic times, occurred. The Antarctic Peninsula is a part of the world that is experiencing extraordinary warming. Each decade for the last five, average temperatures in the Antarctic Peninsula have risen by . Ice mass loss on the peninsula occurred at a rate of 60 billion tons / year in 2006, with the greatest change occurring in the northern tip of the peninsula. Seven ice shelves along the Antarctic Peninsula have retreated or disintegrated in the last two decades. According to a study by the
British Antarctic Survey, glaciers on the peninsula are not only retreating but also increasing their flow rate as a result of increased
buoyancy in the lower parts of the glaciers. Professor David Vaughan has described the disintegration of the Wilkins Ice Shelf as the latest evidence of rapid warming in the area. The
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has been unable to determine the greatest potential effect on
sea level rise that glaciers in the region may cause. ==Flora and fauna==