Post-glacial rebound produces measurable effects on vertical crustal motion, global sea levels, horizontal crustal motion, gravity field, Earth's rotation, crustal stress, and earthquakes. Studies of glacial rebound give us information about the flow law of mantle rocks, which is important to the study of mantle convection,
plate tectonics and the thermal evolution of the Earth. It also gives insight into past ice sheet history, which is important to
glaciology,
paleoclimate, and changes in global sea level. Understanding postglacial rebound is also important to our ability to monitor recent global change.
Vertical crustal motion is former seabed or archipelago: illustrated are sea levels immediately after the last ice age. Erratic
boulders,
U-shaped valleys,
drumlins,
eskers,
kettle lakes,
bedrock striations are among the common signatures of the
Ice Age. In addition, post-glacial rebound has caused numerous significant changes to coastlines and landscapes over the last several thousand years, and the effects continue to be significant. In
Sweden, Lake
Mälaren was formerly an arm of the
Baltic Sea, but uplift eventually cut it off and led to its becoming a
freshwater lake in about the 12th century, at the time when
Stockholm was founded at
its outlet. Marine seashells found in
Lake Ontario sediments imply a similar event in prehistoric times. Other pronounced effects can be seen on the island of
Öland, Sweden, which has little topographic relief due to the presence of the very level
Stora Alvaret. The rising land has caused the
Iron Age settlement area to recede from the
Baltic Sea, making the present day villages on the west coast set back unexpectedly far from the shore. These effects are quite dramatic at the village of
Alby, for example, where the
Iron Age inhabitants were known to subsist on substantial coastal fishing. As a result of post-glacial rebound, the
Gulf of Bothnia is predicted to eventually close up at
Kvarken in more than 2,000 years. The
Kvarken is a
UNESCO World Natural Heritage Site, selected as a "type area" illustrating the effects of post-glacial rebound and the
holocene glacial retreat. In several other
Nordic ports, like
Tornio and
Pori (formerly at
Ulvila), the harbour has had to be relocated several times. Place names in the coastal regions also illustrate the rising land: there are inland places named 'island', 'skerry', 'rock', 'point' and 'sound'. For example,
Oulunsalo "island of
Oulujoki" is a peninsula, with inland names such as
Koivukari "Birch Rock",
Santaniemi "Sandy Cape", and
Salmioja "the brook of the Sound". (Compare and [http://kaino.kotus.fi/www/verkkojulkaisut/julk125/oulunsalo/oulunsalo_nyt.shtml.) and the
British Isles. In
Great Britain, glaciation affected
Scotland but not southern
England, and the post-glacial rebound of northern Great Britain (up to 10 cm per century) is causing a corresponding downward movement of the southern half of the island (up to 5 cm per century). This will eventually lead to an increased risk of
floods in southern England and south-western Ireland. Since the glacial isostatic adjustment process causes the land to move relative to the sea, ancient shorelines are found to lie above present day sea level in areas that were once glaciated. On the other hand, places in the peripheral bulge area which was uplifted during glaciation now begins to subside. Therefore, ancient beaches are found below present day sea level in the bulge area. The "relative sea level data", which consists of height and age measurements of the ancient beaches around the world, tells us that glacial isostatic adjustment proceeded at a higher rate near the end of deglaciation than today. The present-day uplift motion in northern Europe is also monitored by a
GPS network called BIFROST. Results of GPS data show a peak rate of about 11 mm/year in the north part of the
Gulf of Bothnia, but this uplift rate decreases away and becomes negative outside the former ice margin. In the near field outside the former ice margin, the land sinks relative to the sea. This is the case along the east coast of the United States, where ancient beaches are found submerged below present day sea level and Florida is expected to be submerged in the future.
Horizontal crustal motion Accompanying vertical motion is the horizontal motion of the crust. The BIFROST GPS network This causes the formation of new rapids and rivers. For example,
Lake Pielinen in Finland, which is large (90 x 30 km) and oriented perpendicularly to the former ice margin, originally drained through an outlet in the middle of the lake near Nunnanlahti to Lake
Höytiäinen. The change of tilt caused Pielinen to burst through the Uimaharju
esker at the southwestern end of the lake, creating a new river (
Pielisjoki) that runs to the sea via
Lake Pyhäselkä to
Lake Saimaa. The effects are similar to that concerning seashores, but occur above sea level. Tilting of land will also affect the flow of water in lakes and rivers in the future, and thus is important for water resource management planning. In Sweden
Lake Sommen's outlet in the northwest has a rebound of 2.36 mm/a while in the eastern Svanaviken it is 2.05 mm/a. This means the lake is being slowly tilted and the southeastern shores drowned.
Gravity field Ice, water, and mantle rocks have
mass, and as they move around, they exert a gravitational pull on other masses towards them. Thus, the
gravity field, which is sensitive to all mass on the surface and within the Earth, is affected by the redistribution of ice/melted water on the surface of the Earth and the flow of mantle rocks within. Today, more than 6000 years after the last deglaciation terminated, the flow of
mantle material back to the glaciated area causes the overall shape of the Earth to become less
oblate. This change in the topography of Earth's surface affects the long-wavelength components of the gravity field. The changing gravity field can be detected by repeated land measurements with absolute gravimeters and recently by the
GRACE satellite mission. The change in long-wavelength components of Earth's gravity field also perturbs the orbital motion of satellites and has been detected by
LAGEOS satellite motion.
Vertical datum The
vertical datum is a reference surface for altitude measurement and plays vital roles in many human activities, including land surveying and construction of buildings and bridges. Since postglacial rebound continuously deforms the crustal surface and the gravitational field, the vertical datum needs to be redefined repeatedly through time.
State of stress, intraplate earthquakes and volcanism According to the theory of
plate tectonics, plate-plate interaction results in earthquakes near plate boundaries. However, large earthquakes are found in intraplate environments like eastern Canada (up to M7) and northern Europe (up to M5) which are far away from present-day plate boundaries. An important intraplate earthquake was the magnitude 8
New Madrid earthquake that occurred in mid-continental US in the year 1811. Glacial loads provided more than 30 MPa of vertical stress in northern Canada and more than 20 MPa in northern Europe during glacial maximum. This vertical stress is supported by the mantle and the flexure of the
lithosphere. Since the mantle and the lithosphere continuously respond to the changing ice and water loads, the state of stress at any location continuously changes in time. The changes in the orientation of the state of stress is recorded in the
postglacial faults in southeastern Canada. When the postglacial faults formed at the end of deglaciation 9000 years ago, the horizontal principal stress orientation was almost perpendicular to the former ice margin, but today the orientation is in the northeast–southwest, along the direction of
seafloor spreading at the
Mid-Atlantic Ridge. This shows that the stress due to postglacial rebound had played an important role at deglacial time, but has gradually relaxed so that tectonic stress has become more dominant today. According to the
Mohr–Coulomb theory of rock failure, large glacial loads generally suppress earthquakes, but rapid deglaciation promotes earthquakes. According to Wu & Hasagawa, the rebound stress that is available to trigger earthquakes today is of the order of 1 MPa. This stress level is not large enough to rupture intact rocks but is large enough to reactivate pre-existing faults that are close to failure. Thus, both postglacial rebound and past tectonics play important roles in today's intraplate earthquakes in eastern Canada and southeast US. Generally postglacial rebound stress could have triggered the intraplate earthquakes in eastern Canada and may have played some role in triggering earthquakes in the eastern US including the
New Madrid earthquakes of 1811. ==Recent global warming==