A reconstruction of Holocene geomorphology and climate, western Cypress Hills, Alberta and Saskatchewan

1990 ◽  
Vol 27 (11) ◽  
pp. 1504-1510 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J. Sauchyn

The Cypress Hills of southwestern Saskatchewan and southeastern Alberta are a key area for Quaternary research because the permanent lakes and coniferous forest are sources of proxy paleoenvironmental data generally not available on the surrounding northern Great Plains. In this paper, the Holocene paleoclimate of the western Cypress Hills is reconstructed from the pollen and organic matter contents of a 9.6 m sediment core from Harris Lake, Saskatchewan. This climatic history is considerably longer than others from the semiarid Interior Plains of Canada. Chronological control consists of a basal conventional radiocarbon date of 9120 ± 250 BP, Mazama tephra, and three accelerator mass spectrometry dates from plant macrofossils. The data from Harris Lake indicate significant climatic change from the warm, dry altithermal, 7700–5100 BP, to cooler and moister conditions of the late Holocene. Low lake sediment organic matter from 3000 to 2400 BP is attributed to lower temperatures and coincides with a well-documented global neoglacial advance. Correlations among the proposed climatic history, sedimentation rates in Harris Lake, and dated soils and sediments described in the literature are the basis for a reconstruction of the Holocene geomorphology. This information suggests a transition in dominant geomorphic processes from fluvial and aeolian erosion before 5100 BP to rotational landsliding after 4500 BP.

Soil Research ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
pp. 163 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Eynard ◽  
Thomas E. Schumacher ◽  
Michael J. Lindstrom ◽  
Douglas D. Malo ◽  
Robert A. Kohl

Soil organic matter can modify the interaction of clay minerals with water, limiting the rate of water intake of swelling clays and stabilising soil aggregates. Soil structural stability and organic C content usually decrease with cultivation. Faster wetting increases stresses on aggregates and decreases stability. Aggregate wettabilities of prairie soils under 3 different management systems (grassland, no-till, and conventional-till) were compared in the Northern Great Plains of the USA. Six Ustolls and 2 Usterts were selected as replications along the Missouri River. Wettability was measured as water drop penetration time (WDPT) and as rate of water intake under 30 and 300 mm tension. At low tension, aggregates from both cultivated fields and uncultivated grasslands showed similar wettability. Water intake in grass aggregates was attributed to a greater amount of stable pores relative to cultivated aggregates. In cultivated aggregates, slaking created planes of failure that allowed rapid water entry. Differences of wettability between management systems at 300 mm tension (in Ustolls, grasslands had greater wettability than cultivated soils, 0.24 v. 0.17 g water/h.g dry soil) and between soil orders (Usterts had longer WDPT than Ustolls, 2.9 v. 1.7 s) were explained by both clay and organic C contents. Simple measurements of aggregate wettability may be effectively used for soil quality characterisation. Aggregate wettability is a desirable property for agricultural soils when it is related to stable porosity, as may be found in high organic matter soils (e.g. grasslands). Wettability is excessive when fast aggregate wetting results in aggregate destruction as observed in low organic matter cultivated soils.


2013 ◽  
Vol 134 ◽  
pp. 133-141 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joy L. Barsotti ◽  
Upendra M. Sainju ◽  
Andrew W. Lenssen ◽  
Cliff Montagne ◽  
Patrick G. Hatfield

2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Gaimi Davies ◽  
Blake McCann ◽  
Jay Sturdevant ◽  
Fern Swenson ◽  
Igor V. Ovchinnikov

Abstract Bison (Bison bison) are one of the few terrestrial megafauna to survive the transition into the Holocene and provide a unique opportunity to study a species on a broad spatiotemporal scale. Today, bison are primarily managed in small and isolated herds with little known about their ancestral ecology. We studied the carbon and nitrogen isotopes of Northern Great Plains bison from the terminal Pleistocene and throughout the Holocene to gain insight into their paleoecology. This time span is contemporary with the first population bottleneck experienced by bison at the end of the Pleistocene and includes the second bottleneck which occurred in the late 19th century. Results were compared with modern bison herd isotopic values from Theodore Roosevelt National Park (TRNP). Patterns of isotopic variation found in bison over time indicate significant (δ13C p = 0.0008, δ15N p = 0.002) differences in diet composition and correlate with climate throughout the Holocene. Isotopic relationships described here reveal the plasticity of ancient bison in unrestricted rangelands during periods of climatic fluctuations. Managers at TRNP and elsewhere should pursue opportunities to expand bison range to maximize forage opportunities for the species in the face of future environmental change.


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