A late-Glacial diatom and pigment history of Little Lake, New Brunswick with particular reference to the younger Dryas climatic oscillation

1988 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
DavidJ. Rawlence ◽  
A. Senior
1962 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-17
Author(s):  
Gerhard Lang

Abstract. Based upon newer papers a brief summary is given on Late-glacial and Pre-boreal vegetational history at the western and northern border of the Alps; the effects of the Bölling- and especially the Alleröd-oscillation are demonstrated. Proceeding of that the different results by H. Zoller (I960) in Southern Switzerland are examined and the arguments for another dating of his two Late-glacial pollen diagramms are discussed. According to that the first afforestation in the lowlands at the southern border of the Alps occured not in the Allerod but already in the Boiling period; the „Piottino-oscillation", associated with the Gschnitz-Stadium, is probably not a new discovered Pre-boreal climatic oscillation, but corresponds to the Alleröd-oscillation. Therefore it seems not necessary to doubt the synchronism of Younger Dryas and Schlußvereisung in the Alps.


2009 ◽  
Vol 46 (9) ◽  
pp. 637-650 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert J. Mott ◽  
Ian R. Walker ◽  
Samantha L. Palmer ◽  
Martin Lavoie

Pollen and chironomid analyses and radiocarbon dating at Pye Lake on the eastern shore of Nova Scotia are used to outline the vegetation and climatic history of the area. The coast was deglaciated prior to ∼12 200 14C BP (14 300 cal BP), and herbaceous tundra vegetation invaded the area. Midge-inferred maximum summer surface-water temperatures in the lake ranged between 9 and 11 °C. Subsequent gradual warming to ∼18 °C by 10 800 14C BP (12 725 cal BP) favoured the migration of a variety of herbaceous and shrub taxa into the region. Rapid cooling to ∼10 °C saw vegetation revert to herbaceous tundra communities. This interval, related to the Younger Dryas cold interval of the North Atlantic and Europe, lasted until ∼10 000 14C BP (11 630 cal BP). The climate then warmed again to conditions similar to those that prevailed immediately before onset of Younger Dryas cooling. Further warming saw successive tree species migrate into the area until, by the mid-Holocene, the forests contained most of the taxa prevalent today. Since ∼3500 years ago, cooling of the climate has favoured conifer species over broad-leaved taxa. Agriculture and logging practices in the last 150 years have altered the forest composition, but pollen analysis of the most recent sediments cannot resolve these changes adequately.


2014 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 39-50 ◽  
Author(s):  
Iwona Okuniewska-Nowaczyk ◽  
Iwona Sobkowiak-Tabaka

Abstract The Lubuskie Lake District played an important part in recolonisation of the Polish Plain due to its location and the character of the terrain. Despite that, it is and especially its northern part, poorly explored regarding both history of Late Glacial and early Holocene settlements, and the natural environment. The paper presents results of multidisciplinary research in this area. The most spectacular discoveries were connected with remains of settlements of the Hamburgian culture societies at Myszęcin - currently the richest site of this culture over the entire North European Plain. In the vicinity of this site several Late Palaeolithic and Mesolithic settlements of varied functions were recorded. First palynological records came from the Younger Dryas sediments in this area. In a log with a palynological spectrum comprising Younger Dryas and the beginning of the Holocene, a charcoal dust was found and it could indicate human activity as humans lived at a lake shore. An important complement to the image of the Late Glacial settlement at the Lubuskie Lake District was provided by the research near Lubrza that resulted in data regarding settlements of the Federmesser and Świderian culture societies. This region was not typical in a palynological spectrum of deposits during Allerød but also indicated highly diversified thickness of basal peat in a small area.


1993 ◽  
Vol 39 (3) ◽  
pp. 355-360 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francis E. Mayle ◽  
André J. Levesque ◽  
Les C. Cwynar

AbstractIn Atlantic Canada, bulk-sediment dates for the onset of a late-glacial cooling, widely regarded as the Younger Dryas event, are highly variable, ranging from 14,300 ± 270 to 10,800 ± 100 yr B.P. We present the first accelerator-mass-spectrometer (AMS) 14C dates from Atlantic Canada, at or close to the boundaries of this event, from six sites in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. The mean of five dates places the onset of this cooling at ca. 10,770 yr B.P.; the inclusion of a sixth, perhaps anomalously old date, changes the mean to 10,880 yr B.P. The termination averages (three dates) ca. 10,000 yr B.P. These dates place the timing of the Younger Dryas event in Atlantic Canada closer in line with the traditional chronozone boundaries of 11,000 and 10,000 yr B.P. in Northwest Europe.


1992 ◽  
Vol 70 (2) ◽  
pp. 229-239 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J. Rawlence

The succession of postglacial diatom communities was determined in a 5.98 m core from Long Lake, New Brunswick, Canada. The base of the core was dated at 12 200 ± 150 BP. Five major communities were identified: (zone A) from the base to 520 cm, a pioneer Fragilaria/Cyclotella association; (zone B) from 520 to 380 cm, commencing ca. 10 000 BP, a Melosira ambigua/Synedra ulna/Cyclotella/Asterionella community; (zone C) from 380 to 260 cm, a Fragilaria pinnata/Cyclotella pseudostelligera/Tabellaria flocculosa community; (zone D) from 260 to 80 cm, an Asterionella formosa/Cyclotella pseudostelligera/Fragilaria pinnata/Tabellaria flocculosa v. flocculosa community; followed by (zone E) in the upper 80 cm, an Asterionella formosa/Cyclotella meneghiniana/Fragilaria pinnata/Cyclotella pseudostelligera community corresponding with the period of the modern spruce–hardwood community on land. The period of greatest change in the limnic community (zone D) appears to correspond to the period of greatest change in the terrestrial flora, and the mid Holocene Hypsithermal warm peak. The Younger Dryas climatic cooling (ca. 11 000 – 10 000 BP) is preceded by the development of a Fragilaria pinnata/Fragilaria construens/Cyclotella stelligera community, followed by an Ellerbeckia arenaria v. teres biozone, although the Younger Dryas sediments are actually devoid of diatoms. There is evidence of some climatic oscillation following the Younger Dryas period, and some evidence that the climatic cooling began prior to deposition of the mineral layer widely associated with the Younger Dryas throughout the Maritime Provinces of Canada. Key words: paleophycology, diatoms, Younger Dryas, eastern Canada.


Nature ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 323 (6085) ◽  
pp. 247-250 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert J. Mott ◽  
Douglas R. Grant ◽  
Ralph Stea ◽  
Serge Occhietti

2000 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. 339-347 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jorge A. Strelin ◽  
Eduardo C. Malagnino

In the west-central part of Lago Argentino, the Puerto Bandera moraines are clearly detached from longer, more prominent moraines of the last glaciation and from shorter and smaller Neoglacial moraines. Scientists have long speculated about the age of the Puerto Bandera moraines. Detailed geomorphologic studies in the western area of Lago Argentino, including stratigraphic profiles at Bahı́a del Quemado in the northern branch (Brazo Norte), indicate that the Puerto Bandera moraines were deposited by three pulses of ice. Each of the three pulses is represented by single moraine ridges and belts of tightly arranged ridges. The timing of the three glacier advances was established by radiocarbon dating, including data published by John Mercer. The oldest moraine system, formed during the Puerto Bandera I substade, was deposited ca. 13,000 14C yr B.P. Moraines of the Puerto Bandera II substade were deposited ca. 11,000 14C yr B.P. The youngest moraine system was deposited during a minor readvance, shortly before 10,390 C14 yr B.P., and thus appears to have occurred some time during the European Younger Dryas interval. After this third substade, the ice tongues retreated into the interior branches of Lago Argentino and have remained there since. Evidence found at Bahı́a del Quemado, together with data provided by other authors, attests to a significant climatic change by the middle Holocene, which we believe occurred during the Herminita advance, the first Holocene glacial readvance recognized within the area.


1994 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 91-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ramon Pèrez-Obiol ◽  
Ramon Julià

AbstractThe Banyoles lacustrine sequence shows that the vegetational history of the northeastern Iberian Peninsula during the last 30,000 yr follows the North Atlantic pattern of climatic oscillations. The Banyoles pollen diagram, supported by two calibrated 14C dates and nine U/Th dates, shows a clear interstadial event between 30,000 and 27,000 yr B.P., a Pleniglacial period with minor oscillations that ended abruptly ca. 14,420 ± 410 yr B.P., and a late-glacial sequence that records the classical stages described in Northern Europe: the Bølling-Allerød Interstade, the Younger Dryas event at 12,000 yr B.P. (U-series age), and a short warming phase between the Younger Dryas and the last cold event (dated at 11,000 yr B.P., U-series age).


The Holocene ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 27 (5) ◽  
pp. 726-739 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roger LeB Hooke ◽  
Paul R Hanson ◽  
Daniel F Belknap ◽  
Alice R Kelley

When the Laurentide ice sheet retreated rapidly (~150 m/a) across the Penobscot Lowland between ~16 and ~15 ka, the area was isostatically depressed and became inundated by the sea. Silt and clay were deposited, but no significant moraines or deltas were formed. The Penobscot River was reborn at ~14 ka when ice retreated onto land in the upper reaches of the river’s East Branch. As isostatic rebound exceeded sea level rise from melting ice, the river extended itself southward. Between ~13.4 and 12.8 ka, it established a course across marine clay and underlying glacial till in the Lowland. Its gradient was low as differential rebound had not begun. Discharge, however, was higher and the river transported and deposited outwash gravel. During the cold, dry Younger Dryas, ~11 ka, eolian sand began to accumulate in dunes in the Lowland. Some of this sand, along with fluvial sediment from the headwaters, was redistributed into terraces along gentler stretches of the river and into a paleodelta in Penobscot Bay. Eolian activity continued to ~8 ka and aggradation in terraces until ~6 ka. The climate became wetter and warmer after ~6 ka, the dunes were stabilized by vegetation, the river began to downcut, and braiding became less intense. Pauses in the downcutting are reflected in discontinuous strath terraces. In due course, the river re-encountered the old outwash gravels, marine clay, glacial till, and, in a few places, bedrock. Its profile is now stepped, with gentle, gravel-bedded reaches between bedrock ribs that form rapids.


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