scholarly journals Reconstruction of isostatically-adjusted paleo-strandlines along the southern margin of the Laurentide Ice Sheet in the Great Lakes, Lake Agassiz and Champlain Sea basins

Author(s):  
Michael Lewis ◽  
Andy Breckenridge ◽  
James Teller

Abstract: Strandlines document the former presence of lakes and a sea in east-central North America along the southern margin of the retreating Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS). The strandlines of these formerly level water bodies are uplifted to the north and provide evidence of glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) of the Earth’s crust to the former ice load. We compile published ages and measurements of the present elevation and location of shore features in the strandlines of 8 major paleo-waterbodies from the St. Lawrence Valley to the northern Great Plains in digital format as an aid for the numerical modelling of GIA. Data for eastern water bodies were extracted and digitized from publications during the past 120 years. Digital position co-ordinates were scaled from published maps of survey sites or were determined using Google Earth Pro software. Published data for paleo-lakes Duluth and Agassiz were mainly obtained from field measurements and digital elevation models (DEMs). Two-sigma or 95% probability values are provided for the strandline ages and for isobase (contour) positions representing the deformed water surfaces. Peak strandline gradients reported here were largest at about ca. 13,000 years ago. Lower strandline gradients for older shores may reveal areas closer to the peripheral bulge and areas of thinner ice (lighter crustal loads). Concave upward strandline profiles characterize most paleo-basins whereas a linear uplift profile characterizes the Champlain Sea strandline. Directions of strandline maximum uplift within the former water body basins point towards the thickest part of the LIS near the Québec-Labrador ice dome.

2005 ◽  
Vol 18 (16) ◽  
pp. 3317-3338 ◽  
Author(s):  
David H. Bromwich ◽  
E. Richard Toracinta ◽  
Robert J. Oglesby ◽  
James L. Fastook ◽  
Terence J. Hughes

Abstract Regional climate simulations are conducted using the Polar fifth-generation Pennsylvania State University (PSU)–NCAR Mesoscale Model (MM5) with a 60-km horizontal resolution domain over North America to explore the summer climate of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM: 21 000 calendar years ago), when much of the continent was covered by the Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS). Output from a tailored NCAR Community Climate Model version 3 (CCM3) simulation of the LGM climate is used to provide the initial and lateral boundary conditions for Polar MM5. LGM boundary conditions include continental ice sheets, appropriate orbital forcing, reduced CO2 concentration, paleovegetation, modified sea surface temperatures, and lowered sea level. The simulated LGM summer climate is characterized by a pronounced low-level thermal gradient along the southern margin of the LIS resulting from the juxtaposition of the cold ice sheet and adjacent warm ice-free land surface. This sharp thermal gradient anchors the midtropospheric jet stream and facilitates the development of synoptic cyclones that track over the ice sheet, some of which produce copious liquid precipitation along and south of the LIS terminus. Precipitation on the southern margin is orographically enhanced as moist southerly low-level flow (resembling a contemporary Great Plains low-level jet configuration) in advance of the cyclone is drawn up the ice sheet slope. Composites of wet and dry periods on the LIS southern margin illustrate two distinctly different atmospheric flow regimes. Given the episodic nature of the summer rain events, it may be possible to reconcile the model depiction of wet conditions on the LIS southern margin during the LGM summer with the widely accepted interpretation of aridity across the Great Plains based on geological proxy evidence.


2006 ◽  
Vol 58 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 323-336 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen A. Wolfe ◽  
David J. Huntley ◽  
Jeff Ollerhead

Abstract Late Wisconsinan dune activity is investigated within the present-day boreal forest and parkland regions of the northern Great Plains, Canada, to extend the understanding of the spatial and temporal eolian record. Optical ages from stabilized sand dunes document the timing of past activity. Eolian activity ranges from about 16 ka in west-central Alberta to 9 ka in northwestern Saskatchewan. Between about 16 and 13 ka, dune activity in central Alberta occurred in an ice-proximal tundra setting along the margins of the Laurentide and Cordilleran ice sheets. Predominant dune-forming winds were from the west and northwest. Dune activity continued in this area between about 13 and 11 ka within parkland and grassland settings as the Laurentide Ice Sheet retreated to the northeast. Winds continued to blow from the west and northwest, and the climate was likely influenced by an increasingly dominant Pacific air mass. Also beginning at about 13 ka, dune-forming winds along the margins of the retreating Laurentide Ice Sheet were influenced by anticyclonic winds from the southeast that were maintained until about 9 ka. As the Laurentide Ice Sheet retreated, these southeasterly anticyclonic winds were successively replaced by winds from the northwest associated with the Pacific air mass. Dune activity across the region terminated in a time-transgressive manner from the southwest, at about 11 ka, to the northeast, at about 9 ka, with the establishment of boreal forest vegetation and reduced wind strength.


2001 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 79-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph A. Mason

AbstractIn the midwestern United States, large rivers draining the Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS) were the most important sources of Peoria Loess, deposited during the last glaciation. Loess deposition near those rivers may have responded primarily to ice-sheet dynamics rather than direct effects of climatic change. In contrast, it has been proposed that thick Peoria Loess on the central Great Plains was derived mainly from unglaciated landscapes northwest of the main loess deposits. In this study, transport directions inferred from more than 600 measurements of Peoria Loess thickness in Nebraska are used to test the hypothesis that much of the Peoria Loess on the Great Plains is nonglaciogenic. A strong northwest to southeast thickness trend indicates that most Peoria Loess in Nebraska was transported from one or more unglaciated northwestern source areas rather than from glacially influenced river floodplains. The Missouri River (draining the LIS), the Platte River (draining alpine glaciers), and the Elkhorn River (unglaciated basin) were secondary sources. Their contribution is not detectable beyond a distance of 40–60 km. Peoria Loess deposition on the central Great Plains was largely a direct response to climatic change in the unglaciated source region.


2002 ◽  
Vol 17 (8) ◽  
pp. 773-780 ◽  
Author(s):  
Linda Heusser ◽  
Terryanne Maenza-Gmelch ◽  
Thomas Lowell ◽  
Rebecca Hinnefeld

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas V. Lowell ◽  
◽  
Henry Loope ◽  
B. Brandon Curry ◽  
Stephanie L. Heath ◽  
...  

1986 ◽  
Vol 32 (111) ◽  
pp. 235-241 ◽  
Author(s):  
James E. Beget

AbstractThe late Wisconsin Shelbyville till was deposited in southern Illinoisc. 20 000–21 000 year B.P. and records the maximum southern advance of the Lake Michigan lobe of the Laurentide ice sheet. The yield strength calculated for a representative till debris flow found just south of the ice margin is 8 kPa (0.08 bar), and probably approximates yield strength of basal Shelbyville till. An ice-profile model assuming plastic behavior in basal till suggests the southern Lake Michigan lobe may have been unusually thin. Reconstructed Laurentide glacier profiles from the south-west and western Great Plains (South Dakota, Alberta, Minnesota, and Montana), and the MacKenzie Delta, N.W.T., are similar to those inferred for the southern Great Lakes area, and much thinner than those of most modern ice sheets. The Pleistocene Laurentide ice sheet may have been asymmetric: thicker in the east than in the west. Glaciers resting on weak sediments can move both by subglacial sediment deformation (creep) and sliding at the sediment–ice interface. Till rheology is complex; shearing of till by over-riding glaciers would increase porosity and further reduce yield strength.


2005 ◽  
Vol 40 ◽  
pp. 219-224 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreas Bauder ◽  
David M. Mickelson ◽  
Shawn J. Marshall

AbstractSub- and proglacial bed conditions influence advance and retreat of an ice sheet. The existence and distribution of frozen ground is of major importance for better understanding of ice-flow dynamics and landform formation. The southern margin of the Laurentide ice sheet (LIS) was dominated by the presence of relatively thin ice lobes that seem to have been very sensitive to external and internal physical conditions. Their extent and dynamics were highly influenced by the interaction of subglacial and proglacial conditions. A three-dimensional thermomechanical ice-sheet model was coupled with a model for the thermal regime in the upper Earth crust. The model has been applied to the LIS in order to investigate the spatial distribution of thermal conditions at the bed. The evolution of the whole LIS was modeled for the last glacial cycle, with primary attention on correct reconstruction of the southern margin. Our results show extensive temporal and spatial frozen ground conditions. Only a slow degradation of permafrost under the ice was found. We conclude that there are significant interactions between the ice sheet and the underlying frozen ground and that these influence both ice dynamics and landform development.


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