Interstadial Conifer Wood from Northern Maine

1988 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 98-101
Author(s):  
R. Scott Anderson ◽  
Ronald B. Davis ◽  
Robert Stuckenrath ◽  
Harold W. Borns

Conifer wood, probably spruce (Picea sp.), of middle Wisconsinan age (29,200 ± 500 yr B.P.) was recovered from late-glacial lake sediments from Upper South Branch Pond, Maine. If the wood was derived from a local source, deglaciation of part of northern New England is suggested for this time. The occurrence also has implications for understanding the problem associated with radiocarbon dating of bulk lake sediment containing small amounts of organic matter.

Author(s):  
Ole Bennike ◽  
Svante Björck

NOTE: This article was published in a former series of GEUS Bulletin. Please use the original series name when citing this article, for example: Bennike, O., & Björck, S. (2000). Lake sediment coring in South Greenland in 1999. Geology of Greenland Survey Bulletin, 186, 60-64. https://doi.org/10.34194/ggub.v186.5216 _______________ The transition from the last ice age to the Holocene was a period of extremely rapid and large climatic changes (Björck et al. 1998). Because of this, the period has attracted much attention by Quaternary workers since these fluctuations were first demonstrated by Danish scientists (Hartz & Milthers 1901; Iversen 1934, 1954). In the ice-free parts of Greenland, many attempts have been made over the past few decades to find sediments from this transitional period. Some radiocarbon dates on marine molluscs from the late-glacial have been published, but most are based on conventional dating of several shells that might represent a mixture of Holocene and interglacial material. Conventional radiocarbon dating of lake sediments has also produced a number of ‘late-glacial’ dates, but where checked by accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon dating, the sediments have proved to be Holocene (Björck et al. 1994a, b). These sediments contain ‘old carbon’ in the form of coal fragments and reworked interglacial organic detritus. In 1999 we tried a new approach to locate late-glacial lake sediments in Greenland. In southernmost Greenland, the shelf is narrow and the land area relatively small. Therefore the amount of glacierization during the Quaternary glacial stages must have been limited. In addition, this region is situated so far south in the North Atlantic that it must have been much influenced by the warming at 14,700 GRIP years BP (Björck et al. 1998). The southern location also means that the temperature conditions would allow a fairly rich plant and animal life to have become established rather early after recession of the ice. Sediment records from lakes located near sea-level at some distance from the outer coast extend back to the earliest Holocene (Fredskild 1973). Lakes situated at higher elevations might have become deglaciated earlier, when the Inland Ice thinned over the coast towards the end of the last ice age. Thus, in the 1999 programme we have sampled high-elevation basins, situated at 350–720 m above sea level (see Table 1). Basins situated in cirque valleys were avoided because it is possible that glaciers would have been present in such basins during the Little Ice Age. However, it turned out that most of the high-elevation basins investigated were devoid of sediments. Even at water depths over several tens of metres, the bottom consisted of stones and boulders and a good sedimentary sequence was only found in a single lake. For this reason, low-elevation basins as far away as possible from the present ice margin were also cored. In addition, it was decided to core a series of isolation basins at different elevations below the marine limit in order to establish a securely constrained curve for the relative shore-level change after the last deglaciation. Many such curves have been published from different parts of Greenland, but they are mainly based on mollusc shell dates which are much more uncertain than dates from isolation basins. The dated molluscs lived at various depths below sea-level and their relationship to the former sea-level is always uncertain. The locations of the cored basins are shown in Fig. 1 and short notes on the lakes are given in Table 1. This work is a continuation of the studies of recent years on lake sediments in South and West Greenland by the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (Anderson & Bennike 1997; Overpeck et al. 1998; Anderson et al. 1999; 2000, this volume; Bennike 2000; Brodersen & Anderson 2000, this volume).


Radiocarbon ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 28 (2A) ◽  
pp. 495-502 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dušan Srdoč ◽  
Bogomil Obelić ◽  
Nada Horvatinčić ◽  
Ines Krajcar-Bronić ◽  
Elena Marčenko ◽  
...  

Samples of sediment cores from two lakes in the karst area of northwest Yugoslavia were analyzed. Both Lakes Kozjak and Prošće are in the Plitvice National Park, Central Croatia. 14C dating, sedimentologic, seismic, and isotopic studies, and distribution of diatoms are presented.14C dating of lake marl revealed a uniforn sedimentation rate in Lake Prošće as opposed to Lake Kozjak. Both lake sediments belong to the Holocene period. 14C dating of lake sediment is in agreement with seismic profiles, sedimentologic analysis, and diatom frequency measurements both in an undisturbed as well as in a disturbed lake sediment.


2012 ◽  
Vol 63 (4) ◽  
pp. 50-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
Krystyna Konecka-Betley

Abstract Transformations of the natural environment in the area surrounding and encompassing the Vistula River valley during the last 20 000 years BP should be discussed with regard to radiocarbon dating of the organic matter in the documented fossil soils. Part of the 14C dates from horizons A of pedosols in the valley have already been published, for the upper part of the valley by Balwierz & Nalepka [1992], and for the lower part - by Turkowska [1992]. Palynologic analysis was also made in many of the documented sites. The most important events in the history of the valley have been supplemented by radiocarbon dating by Starkel [2001]. This report presents 14C dates measured in the buried organic horizons of fossil soils in the Middle Vistula valley between Stężyca (Dęblin area) to Liszyno (Płock area). Most datings were made in the Kampinos Forest. For mineral-organic soils the dates lie between 1080 ± 90 Gd. 19S, Laski [Urbaniak-Biernacka 1973] and 12 160 ± 260 [Gd. 4391, Mariew [Konecka-Betley 1991]. In turn, the base of the oldest peat horizon in the Kampinos Forest supplied a date of 10 S90 ± 340 Gd. 2260, Wilków [Konecka-Betley et al. 1991].


1985 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 341-368 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. B. Davis ◽  
G. L. Jacobson

The landscapes of northern New England and adjacent areas of Canada changed greatly between 14,000 and 9000 yr B.P.: deglaciation occurred, sea levels and shorelines shifted, and a vegetational transition from tundra to closed forest took place. Data from 51 14C-dated sites from a range of elevations were used to map ice and sea positions, physiognomic vegetational zones, and the spread of individual tree taxa in the region. A continuum of tundra-woodland-forest passed northeastward and northward without major hesitation or reversal. An increased rate of progression from 11,000 to 10,000 yr B.P. suggests a more rapid warming than in the prior 2000–3000 yr. Elevational gradients controlled the patterns of deglaciation and vegetational change. The earliest spread of tree taxa was via the lowlands of southern Vermont and New Hampshire, and along a coastal corridor in Maine. Only after 12,000 yr B.P. did the taxa spread northward through the rest of the area. Different tree species entered the southern part of the area at different times and continued their spread at different rates. The approximate order of arrival follows: poplars (13,000–12,000 yr B.P. in the south), spruces, paper birch, and jack pine, followed by balsam fir and larch, and possibly ironwood, ash, and elm, and somewhat later by oak, maple, white pine, and finally hemlock (10,000–9000 yr B.P. in the south).


1991 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 41-52 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mary E. Edwards ◽  
Patricia F. McDowell

AbstractA 12-m sequence of lake sediment and peat in a 45-m high exposure on Birch Creek, northeast Alaska, contains pollen of Picea, Betula, Alnus and Populus, and wood of Picea and Populus. This sequence, which may represent 10,000 yr of more of accumulation, is beyond the limit of radiocarbon dating. It lies between two units of loess; the underlying loess lies above the Old Crow Tephra, recently dated at 149,000 ± 13,000 yr B.P. The lake sediments probably were deposited during the last interglaciation (isotope substage 5e) and subsequently buried by Wisconsinan loess. Analogs for the ancient lake may be deep, long-lived thaw lakes that are present in the modern landscape. When Birch Creek is correlated with other sites across nonglaciated Alaska and northwest Canada, there appears to be a common interglacial signal in sediments overlying the Old Crow Tephra.


2015 ◽  
Vol 83 (3) ◽  
pp. 522-530 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gordon R.M. Bromley ◽  
Brenda L. Hall ◽  
Woodrow B. Thompson ◽  
Michael R. Kaplan ◽  
Juan Luis Garcia ◽  
...  

Prominent moraines deposited by the Laurentide Ice Sheet in northern New England document readvances, or stillstands, of the ice margin during overall deglaciation. However, until now, the paucity of direct chronologies over much of the region has precluded meaningful assessment of the mechanisms that drove these events, or of the complex relationships between ice-sheet dynamics and climate. As a step towards addressing this problem, we present a cosmogenic 10Be surface-exposure chronology from the Androscoggin moraine complex, located in the White Mountains of western Maine and northern New Hampshire, as well as four recalculated ages from the nearby Littleton–Bethlehem moraine. Seven internally consistent 10Be ages from the Androscoggin terminal moraines indicate that advance culminated ~ 13.2 ± 0.8 ka, in close agreement with the mean age of the neighboring Littleton–Bethlehem complex. Together, these two datasets indicate stabilization or advance of the ice-sheet margin in northern New England, at ~ 14–13 ka, during the Allerød/Greenland Interstadial I.


HortScience ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 260F-260
Author(s):  
Francis X. Mangan ◽  
Stephen J. Herbert ◽  
Mary Jane Else

Cover crops have been used in agricultural systems for thousands of years and are still an important part of vegetable production in the Northeast. Winter rye (Secale cereale) is by far the dominant cover crop species on conventional vegetable farms in the New England states. It is use is primarily for erosion control. Winter rye is popular since it is cheap, easy to establish, can overwinter in the harsh winters of northern New England, is efficient in “capturing” excess nitrogen at the end of the cash crop season, and it can produce substantial amounts of organic matter in the spring. As many positive attributes that winter rye has, it is important to be aware of many of the other potential cover crop species that are available to us. For example, many conventional growers are exploring the use of leguminous cover crops as an alternative to chemical nitrogen fertilizers which are more readily leached and are only going to get more expensive. Cover crops can also be seeded and managed in innovative ways to suppress weeds and other pests, add organic matter and conserve soil moisture.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amanda May ◽  
Lisa Doner ◽  
Jeremiah Duncan ◽  
Stephen Hill

Abstract The p,p’ isomers of DDT, DDE, and DDD were analyzed in soils, sediments, and crayfish in the Squam Lake watershed in central New Hampshire (NH), U.S.A. Bennett Brook sources elevated levels of DDT residues to Squam Lake through sediment transport, likely due to legacy contamination from applications to an apple orchard surrounding the stream in the mid 1900s. Results reveal a point source located at a barn used during the orchard operation, which was burned down around 1967, with up to 723 µg/kg p,p’ DDT and 721 µg/kg p,p’ DDE in the soils. Higher DDT than DDE in soil samples, but not in sediment samples, suggests persistence of the contaminant in watershed soils, and faster degradation once mobilized into Bennett Brook and Squam Lake. DDT residues in the lake sediments from 1951 to the present, reveal DDT has consistently been entering Squam Lake since usage began in the U.S. There are likely multiple sources that have contributed to the constant supply, including the orchard soils treated with DDT serving as a nonpoint source, the barn site, and DDT-laden soils vulnerable to erosion, including stream banks and logged or steeply sloped land. Detections of residues in the stream and lake sediments exceed certain sediment quality guidelines for the protection of aquatic life. Higher p,p’ DDE levels in crayfish collected in the mouth of Bennett Brook versus crayfish collected in Squam Lake, distant from Bennett Brook, suggests that residues sourcing from this sub-watershed are entering the aquatic food chain at levels higher than other parts of the lake.


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