Chronology of glacial Lake Agassiz meltwater routed to the Gulf of Mexico

2003 ◽  
Vol 59 (2) ◽  
pp. 271-276 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timothy G. Fisher

AbstractSediment cores with new radiocarbon dates from the southern outlet of glacial Lake Agassiz indicate that meltwater delivery to the Mississippi valley was disrupted at 10,800 14C yr B.P. and the outlet was abandoned by 9400 14C yr B.P. These findings confirm the timing of generally accepted terminations of the Lockhart and Emerson Phases of Lake Agassiz. Additionally, the radiocarbon chronology indicates that the spillway was fully formed by 10,800 14C yr B.P. and that the occupancy in late-Emerson time was likely short-lived with minimal spillway erosion.

1999 ◽  
Vol 36 (8) ◽  
pp. 1299-1314 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan Risberg ◽  
Per Sandgren ◽  
James T Teller ◽  
William M Last

A 14.2 m long core was recovered from the southern Lake Manitoba basin. The sediment, consisting mainly of silty clay, was studied for siliceous microfossil content and mineral magnetics; 14 new accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon dates provide chronological control of the paleoenvironmental history of the basin. The basal 5 m contains ice-rafted clasts and is largely barren of siliceous microfossils; these sediments were deposited when the lake was part of glacial Lake Agassiz. Sediments immediately overlying the barren part of the sequence contain AMS dates of 7700-7400 BP and reflect a dramatic change in conditions in the basin. Diatom abundances rise abruptly. Magnetic characteristics change substantially. The presence of freshwater taxa such as Stephanodiscus niagarae, together with brackish water diatoms, indicate that shallow, turbid, high-nutrient conditions with variable salinity occurred during the early part of the middle Holocene. Although climatic conditions throughout the northern Great Plains are known to have become drier and warmer during the mid-Holocene, there is a distinct change in diatom taxa in the Lake Manitoba sequence toward less saline conditions at this time. The presence of the riverine diatom Aulacoseira granulata in this interval supports previous conclusions that these freshwater conditions resulted from the northward diversion of the Assiniboine River into the basin. Following this, diatoms indicate an abrupt increase in salinity to >1500 mg·L-1 total dissolved solids between 4000 and 2600 BP, reflecting the diversion of the fresh waters of the Assiniboine River away from Lake Manitoba. Increasingly cooler and wetter conditions during the late Holocene, combined with differential isostatic rebound, caused a freshening of the lake during the late Holocene.


2014 ◽  
Vol 51 (9) ◽  
pp. 850-861 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiuju Liu ◽  
Timothy G. Fisher ◽  
Kenneth Lepper ◽  
Thomas V. Lowell

The cause and age of the Moorhead low-water Phase of glacial Lake Agassiz remains uncertain. New geochemical (X-ray fluorescence (XRF) and elemental analysis) and chronological (optically stimulated luminescence (OSL)) data are used to test for evaporative enrichment within lacustrine sediment from Rabbit Lake, a small basin just above the highest Lake Agassiz strandline, and from two Lake Agassiz sediment cores at Fargo, North Dakota. Increases in quartz and gypsum interpreted to be of aeolian origin suggest increased aridity at Rabbit Lake sometime after 13 540–13 750 cal years BP. From the Fargo cores, lacustrine sediment of the Brenna and Sherack formations did not show convincing evidence for evaporative enrichment. However, this result is complicated by an erosional contact at the top of the Brenna Formation. A thin middle sand unit between the Brenna and Sherack formation clays is stratigraphically equivalent to the Poplar River Formation, West Fargo Member, but its properties differ from the fluvial sand of the West Fargo Member. Four OSL ages from the organic-poor, middle sand unit at Fargo range between 12.8 ± 0.2 and 13.5 ± 0.2 ka (with ±1.6 ka uncertainty) and suggest lake level fell at Fargo at, or before, 13.1 ± 0.2 ka, the average of the OSL ages. With different sedimentological properties, and a difference of ∼1750 years between the new OSL ages and previously published ages on the West Fargo Member sand, additional work is required to determine whether the middle sand unit is a new member of the Poplar River Formation, recording an earlier and different depositional environment than the West Fargo Member. From a plot of available ages for the Moorhead Phase, the regression remains poorly constrained in time.


1975 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 529-540 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.C. Ritchie ◽  
L.K. Koivo

The sediment and diatom stratigraphy of a small pond on The Pas moraine, near Grand Rapids, Manitoba, reveals a change in sedimentary environment related directly to the last stages of Glacial Lake Agassiz. Beach sands were replaced by clay 7300 14C y. a., then by organic silt and, at 4000 14C y. a. by coarse organic detritus; the corresponding diatom assemblages were (I) a predominantly planktonic spectrum in beach sands, (II) a rich assemblage of nonplanktonic forms, and (III) a distinctly nonplanktonic acidophilous spectrum. These results confirm Elson's (1967) reconstruction of the extent and chronology of the final (Pipun) stage of Glacial Lake Agassiz. The sedimentary environments change from a sandy beach of a large lake at 7300 BP to a small, shallow eutrophic pond with clay and silt deposition from 7000 to 4000 BP. From 4000 BP to the present, organic detritus was deposited in a shallow pond that tended toward dystrophy.


2012 ◽  
Vol 55 ◽  
pp. 125-144 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lorna D. Linch ◽  
Jaap J.M. van der Meer ◽  
John Menzies

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