The postglacial relative sea-level lowstand in Newfoundland

1995 ◽  
Vol 32 (9) ◽  
pp. 1308-1330 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Shaw ◽  
Donald L. Forbes

Relative sea level in coastal regions of Newfoundland fell from late-glacial maximum levels to postglacial minima in several phases: (i) an early period of high relative sea level, when Late Wisconsinan ice was at the coast and discharging meltwater plumes into the ocean; (ii) a period of rapidly falling relative sea level, during which glaciers retreated inland; and (iii) a period without glacier ice, during which relative sea level continued to fall, but at decreasing rates. Falling relative sea level caused fluvial incision of glacial deposits in some coastal embayments, and culminated with the construction of lowstand marine deltas. These deltas were submerged during the subsequent Holocene transgression. Seismic reflection data from selected deltas show that they comprise wedges of sediment with prograded, seaward-dipping, foreset-style internal reflections. The depth of the relative sea-level lowstand varies spatially, and it was diachronous. It occurred relatively early and deep in peripheral regions (i.e., farther from the centre of the island), but was later and shallower landward, and close to its northern limits. Approximate ages of the lowstand are 9.5 ± 1 ka in the St. George's Bay – Port au Port region, just over 8.6 ka in Hamilton Sound, before 7.0 ka at Swift Current, 8.7 ka at Connoire Bay, just over 8.2 ka in Bay d'Espoir, and ca. 6.5 ka on the Great Northern Peninsula. The relative sea-level minima range down to at least –30 m, and form a concentric pattern around central Newfoundland, similar to the pattern of raised marine limits.

1990 ◽  
Vol 27 (7) ◽  
pp. 964-983 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Shaw ◽  
D. L. Forbes

Shallow seismic reflection data collected in St. George's Bay, southwest Newfoundland, reveal a complex pattern of subsurface topography and acoustic facies. Two basins in the inner bay are underlain by glacially overdeepened valleys that extend to depths in excess of 180 m. Within the thick Quaternary sequence in the inner bay we recognize eight acoustic units. Units 1 (ice contact), 2 (subaqueous outwash), and 3 (draped glaciomarine) record the presence and retreat of a major Late Wisconsinan ice margin. Unit 4 (postglacial mud) has resulted from reworking of glaciogenic sediments in response to changes in relative sea level. Unit 5 (postglacial sand) is a shoreface deposit on the seaward front of the former moraine. Unit 6 (postglacial delta) was formed by fluvial reworking of glaciogenic sediments during the postglacial lowstand of relative sea level. Unit 7 (postglacial barrier–platform) comprises seaward-fining clinoform prisms that have prograded into the basins, and underlie gravel beach-ridge plains at Stephenville and Flat Island. Unit 8 (postglacial spillover) results from entrainment of coarse sediment on the shallow sill and subsequent progradation into the basins of the inner bay.Seabed sediment in the basins is mud where sampled. The submarine platforms associated with the barriers at Stephenville and Flat Island are largely sandy. The sill is covered by a gravel veneer, with irregular patches of sand that coalesce and thicken seawards. Extensive areas of gravel ripples testify to the continued mobility of much of the coarse sediment on the sill.A major ice front in the inner bay was present prior to 13.7 ka BP. The draped glaciomarine sediments, dated at 13.7–11.2 ka BP in nearby Port au Port Bay, were deposited after withdrawal of the ice front to the vicinity of the present coast, during a readvance, and subsequently. During the postglacial lowstand of relative sea level much of the present sill area was emergent.


1988 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 237-250 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert N. Oldale

Reinterpretation of seismic-reflection data from Cape Cod Bay has produced a revised late Wisconsinan history. Acoustically laminated deposits, originally inferred to be glaciolacustrine, are shown to be glaciomarine by tracing them to glaciomarine mud in Stellwagen Basin, north of Cape Cod Bay. A late Wisconsinan marine deposit of nonglacial origin overlies the glaciomarine deposits in Cape Cod Bay. Both deposits indicate that the crust was isostatically depressed below the late Wisconsinan eustatic sea level and that deglaciation and marine submergence occurred simultaneously. Valleys cut into the marine deposits, both glacial and nonglacial, indicate that a low sea-level stand, the result of isostatic rebound, occurred shortly after the marine incursion. A transgressive uncomformity and marine deposits, both mostly of Holocene age, overlie the late Wisconsinan deposits. The marine incursion, regression, and Holocene transgression represent the northward passage of an isostatically induced peripheral bulge following deglaciation. In turn, the bulge, a response to crustal loading and unloading, indicates thick glacier ice in the terminal zone and lends support to arguments for a maximum Laurentide ice model. Evidence for a late Wisconsinan marine incursion, regression, and the passage of a peripheral bulge should be sought in the other bays and sounds of the New England terminal zone.


1999 ◽  
Vol 36 (8) ◽  
pp. 1327-1345 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heiner Josenhans ◽  
Scott Lehman

The three-dimensional configuration of the Quaternary sediments in the Gulf of St. Lawrence is described based on analysis of 8000 km of high-resolution seismic reflection data complemented by analysis of seven piston cores. Till and or ice-contact deposits, glaciomarine sediments, postglacial basinal muds, and bank-top lagoonal sediments grading to sands and gravels make up the stratigraphic succession. Numerous thick accumulations of ice-contact - morainal deposits and "till tongues" indicate the position of former ice margins. The sequence of breakup of the last glacial ice in the gulf has been interpreted on the basis of these data and associated accelerator mass spectroscopy 14C dates. Grounded ice extended beyond Cabot Strait before 14.3 ka and retreated rapidly to north of Anticosti Island by 13.7 ka. Local residual piedmont lobes of glacial ice within the Cape Breton Channel and Baie des Chaleurs persisted longer, until about 12.2 ka. Ancestral hanging valleys formed the Cape Breton Channel and Baie des Chaleurs and served as conduits for ice lobes that flowed into the deeper Laurentian Channel. As many as four superimposed (Late Wisconsinan) glaciogenic sequences, up to 190 m in composite thickness, occur at the mouths of these (hanging) valleys. The thickest glacial sections were deposited on the southwestward slope of the Laurentian Channel. The surface of the till - ice-contact sediments between 440 and 100 m below present sea level has been extensively modified by iceberg scouring. The deeper limit (440 m) marks the maximum draft of icebergs, which was in large part determined by the thickness of the calving ice front. The disappearance of iceberg scour marks at 100 m is interpreted to have resulted from erosion of the glacial deposits by a Late Wisconsinan transgression whose low stand is suggested by a well-developed terrace on parts of the Magdalen Plateau at a present water depth of 110 m. A piston core that penetrated sediments overlying the uppermost (Late Wisconsinan) till in the Cape Breton Channel is interpreted to represent a deposit of lagoonal or shallow-marine sediments with localized deposits in excess of 65 m thickness. The depositional style of the postglacial deposits suggests sufficient bottom currents to erode sediments on the Magdalen Plateau.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerben de Jager ◽  
Dicky Harishidayat ◽  
Benjamin Emmel ◽  
Ståle Emil Johansen

<p>Clinoforms are aquatic sedimentary features commonly associated with strata prograding from a shallower water depth into a deeper water depth. They are very sensitive to changes in water depth, rapidly moving along the shelf in response to sea level changes.  By reconstructing the initial clinoform geometry of buried clinoforms, an estimate of the paleo water depth (PWD) can be made. When this is done for several subsequent clinoform sets the amounts and rates of bathymetric changes can be calculated.</p><p>Here we present a novel approach to estimate clinoform parameters and depositional depths for continental margin clinoforms using seismic reflections, wellbore and biostratigraphy data. Seismic interpretation of three relatively east-west regional full-stack seismic reflection data from the continental margin of the western Barents Sea revealed twelve Late Cenozoic horizons. The clinoform shapes have been restored by removing the effects of compaction and flexural isostasy (backstripping). This includes the effects of glacial/interglacial scenarios on horizons with strong glaciomarine seismic indications.</p><p>Based on the reconstructed clinoform geometries we use empirical relationships from literature between clinoform geometry and depositional depth to estimate PWD values. In these analyses it is possible to estimate the PWD of the upper rollover point and the toe point by measuring the bottomset height, foreset height and topset height. A sensitivity analysis study has also been done on several different scenarios, varying elastic thickness, decompaction and net to gross ratio. Comparison with biostratigraphic water depth estimates indicate that PWD estimates revealed from clinoform parameters give reliable results.</p><p>Any mismatch between the backstripped PWD values and the PWD values derived from the clinoform geometry can then be attributed to geological processes not included in the backstripping process. Among others, these could be explained by rifting, thermal effects in the lithosphere, faulting or eustatic sea level changes. This allows the quantification of the magnitude of these large-scale crustal processes through time.</p><p>We will demonstrate that this method can further constrain the PWD on the continental margin clinoform system and thus can help to improve the understanding of the interplay between sedimentary processes and large-scale crustal processes. Furthermore, the PWD estimates will be a reliable input for further analysis of source-to-sink and stratigraphic forward modeling studies as well as reservoir and source rocks prediction on the petroleum development and exploration.</p><p> </p>


1981 ◽  
Vol 18 (7) ◽  
pp. 1146-1163 ◽  
Author(s):  
Garry Quinlan ◽  
Christopher Beaumont

Two extreme models of late Wisconsinan ice cover in Atlantic Canada and the northeastern U.S.A. are shown to produce postglacial relative sea level curves that bracket existing field observations at six sites throughout the region. This suggests that the true late Wisconsinan ice distribution is probably intermediate to the two contrasting reconstructions proposed. Both ice models predict the existence of four relative sea level zones: an innermost zone closest to the centre of glaciation in which relative sea level falls continuously throughout postglacial time; an outermost zone in which it rises continuously; and two transitional zones in which it first falls and then rises in varying proportions according to the distance from the ice margin. The distinctive forms of the relative sea level curves are probably representative of each of the zones and are unlikely to be significantly perturbed even by large local ice readvances. They, therefore, establish patterns with which future field data are expected to conform. The form that the geological record of relative sea level change is likely to take within each zone is discussed and promising settings for the collection of new data are proposed. The common practice of separating relative sea level into an isostatic and a eustatic component is analysed and shown to be incorrect as usually applied. The practice is also shown to be unnecessary because the models discussed in this paper predict changes in relative sea level that can be compared directly with the observations.


1985 ◽  
Vol 22 (7) ◽  
pp. 1039-1047 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. A. Brookes ◽  
D. B. Scott ◽  
J. H. McAndrews

We first report pollen and foraminifera analyses and radiocarbon dates from two cores taken from salt-marsh deposits bordering Port au Port Bay, southwestern Newfoundland. Results show that relative sea level (RSL) stood at 2.8 m below present higher high-water level (HHWL) at 2770 ± 300 years BP and at −1.8 m at 2365 ± 175 years BP at the core sites. They permit calculation of a rate of late Holocene RSL change from western Newfoundland. We then report other available dates bearing on the earlier RSL record of this area.A date of 5800 ± 200 years BP fixes the age of minimum RSL in Port au Port Bay at 11–14 m below present. A date of 9350 ± 120 years BP from St. George's provides a minimum age for the passage of sea level below present there. A date of 12 600 ± 140 years BP from Stephenville fixes a sea level at 29 m above present, whereas one of 13 600 ± 110 years BP from Abrahams Cove dates the marine limit at 44 m. These geographically restricted data closely constrain a curve of postglacial RSL change in the Port au Port Bay – northern St. George's Bay area. The form of the curve supports a recent model predicting sea-level response to wastage of a limited late Wisconsinan ice load in the wider region.


1990 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 296-305 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter U. Clark ◽  
William W. Fitzhugh

AbstractThe age of the marine limit and associated deglaciation has been estimated from relative sea-level curves for the Hopedale and Nain areas of the central Labrador coast as approximately 7600 ± 200 and 8500 ± 200 yr ago, respectively. These ages indicate that the ice margin remained on the coast for up to 3000 yr longer than previously estimated. Because the central coast is due east of glacial lakes Naskaupi and McLean, the earliest the lakes could have formed was <8500 ± 200 yr ago, with their largest phases being fully established only after 7600 ± 200 yr ago. This suggests that the age of the lakes, and associated deglaciation of the central Labrador-Ungava region, is younger by at least 1500 yr than previously estimated. A late-glacial marine-based ice mass in Ungava Bay that dammed the lakes collapsed ca. 7000 yr ago. Within this time frame, therefore, the glacial lakes only existed for <500 yr. The persistence of the Laurentide Ice Sheet margin on the central Labrador coast until 7600 yr ago probably restricted the northward movement of early prehistoric people into northern Labrador.


1982 ◽  
Vol 19 (12) ◽  
pp. 2232-2246 ◽  
Author(s):  
Garry Quinlan ◽  
Christopher Beaumont

The post-Wisconsinan relative sea-level record from Atlantic Canada is used to reconstruct the morphology of late Wisconsinan age ice cover during its retreat from the Atlantic region. The proposed reconstruction has little or no grounded ice in the southern Gulf of St. Lawrence, an ice dome over the north shore of the St. Lawrence, and thin ice, often less than 1 km thick, over much of the rest of the area. A sensitivity analysis shows that the proposed reconstruction is not unique in its ability to account for the relative sea-level record but that the thickness of ice in any individual area of the reconstruction is unlikely to be in error by more than a factor of two. The exact position of the ice margin in some areas is not well constrained by the model; an example is in southeastern Newfoundland.The numerical model used to relate ice morphology to postglacial relative sea level assumes that the ice sheets are isostatically equilibrated at the glacial maximum and, therefore, that load changes associated with earlier ice-sheet growth may be ignored. This assumption is shown to be reasonable. The same rapid relaxation of the Earth that allows one to ignore the effects of glacial accumulation, however, prohibits one from recognizing the effects of large-scale ablation that may have occurred prior to the assumed glacial maximum. For this reason the proposed reconstruction may be representative of only a late stage in the ablation of much more extensive and thicker ice sheets.Surfaces of relative sea level are presented for Atlantic Canada at various times in the past. These surfaces coincide with observational data where such data exist and are felt to provide reasonable estimates of relative sea level at all other locations for at least the last 13 000 years.


2010 ◽  
Vol 61 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 225-227
Author(s):  
Ian A. Brookes

Abstract This note reports the geological contexts and radiocarbon and calibrated ages of whalebone and bivalve recovered from emerged deglacial marine sediments at Trout River, Newfoundland (49°28.6’ N, 58°07’ W). The rate of sea-level fall is calculated for the first deglacial millennium, and discrepancies are noted between calibrated ages of bone and shell.


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