scholarly journals Glacial Stratigraphy of the Bulkley River Region: A Depositional Framework for the Late Pleistocene in Central British Columbia*

2006 ◽  
Vol 58 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 217-228 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew J. Stumpf ◽  
Bruce E. Broster ◽  
Victor M. Levson

Abstract A depositional framework for late Pleistocene sediments in central British Columbia was developed from the composite stratigraphy of glacial sediments found in the Bulkley River region. Nonglacial deposits correlated to the Olympia Nonglacial Interval, are overlain in succession by sub-till, ice-advance sediments, Late Wisconsinan (Fraser Glaciation) till, and late-glacial sediments. Due to local erosion and depositional variability, some of the units are not continuous throughout the region and differ locally in their thickness and complexity. At the onset of the Fraser Glaciation, ice advance was marked by rising base levels in rivers, lake ponding, and ice marginal subaqueous deposition. Physiography and glacier dynamics influenced the position of drainage outlets, direction of water flow, and ponding. The region was completely ice covered during this glaciation and ice-flow directions were variable, being dominantly influenced by the migrating position of ice divides. Deglaciation was marked by the widespread deposition of fine-grained sediments in proglacial lakes and glaciofluvial sands and gravels at locations with unrestricted drainage.

2006 ◽  
Vol 43 (4) ◽  
pp. 461-485 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Ross ◽  
Michel Parent ◽  
Beatriz Benjumea ◽  
James Hunter

The Quaternary sediments of previously unstudied buried valleys and sections near Montréal are analyzed and other sites are revisited to further develop the stratigraphic framework of the St. Lawrence Lowland and to establish regional glacial and deglacial models. The southwest-trending buried valleys were investigated by stratigraphic drilling and high-resolution seismic profiling. The Quaternary succession consists, from base to top, of proximal glaciolacustrine sediments, two superposed till sheets (Argenteuil and Oka tills) of inferred Late Wisconsinan age, and Champlain Sea sediments. The glacial sediments of this sequence record an ice advance toward south (Argenteuil Till) followed by an abrupt ice-flow shift toward the southwest (Oka Till). Compositional and geomorphic data indicate that Oka Till is ubiquitous and is associated with a regional set of glacial landforms. The analysis of a regional digital elevation model in combination with published ice-flow indicators shows convergent flow patterns from the Ottawa–Montréal–Adirondack regions toward the Lake Ontario basin. Landforms produced by the inferred ice stream are locally crosscut by southward-trending ice-flow features. Hence southward flow in the upper St. Lawrence Valley seemingly took place in two distinct contexts: (1) during full glacial conditions, as ice margins stood at or near the late glacial maximum limits, and (2) during late deglaciation, as a post-ice stream reequilibration mechanism. Early deglacial events in the study area were also characterized by subglacial meltwater channelling and erosion along the valleys, subaquatic outwash deposition in glacial Lake Candona, and rapid infill of the valleys during the early stages of the ensuing Champlain Sea.


2011 ◽  
Vol 48 (6) ◽  
pp. 1091-1111 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Plouffe ◽  
J.M. Bednarski ◽  
C.A. Huscroft ◽  
R.G. Anderson ◽  
S.J. McCuaig

This study is centred on the Bonaparte Lake map area located in the southern Interior Plateau of south-central British Columbia. The reconstruction of the Late Wisconsinan glacial history of this part of the southern sector of the Cordilleran Ice Sheet incorporates (i) the analysis and interpretation of landforms of various scales, (ii) the sedimentology and stratigraphy of glacial sediments, and (iii) the geochemical and mineralogical composition of till and analysis of regional glacial dispersal of these components. The onset of the last glacial event was initiated by ice advancing westerly and southwesterly into the study area from an alpine source region located in the Cariboo Mountains. As glaciation intensified, ice from the Coast Mountains coalesced with the Cariboo Mountain ice over the Interior Plateau and developed into an ice divide around 52° north latitude, which resulted in ice flow to be diverted to a southerly direction over the study area. The two dominant ice-flow directions produced palimpsest dispersal that was measured by three tracers in till including thorianite grains and terbium concentrations in the heavy mineral fraction, and granitoid pebble percentage. The two main phases of ice flow identified within our study area have significant implications for mineral exploration that uses mineral tracing in glacial sediments, especially in the area underlain by the highly prospective Quesnel Terrane.


2001 ◽  
Vol 38 (4) ◽  
pp. 719-731 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Plouffe ◽  
V M Levson

The Quaternary stratigraphy of the Nechako River – Cheslatta Lake area of central British Columbia is described and interpreted to reconstruct the late Quaternary history of the region. Exposures of glacial and nonglacial sediments deposited prior to the last glaciation (Fraser) are limited to three sites. Pollen assemblages from pre-Fraser nonglacial sediments at two of these sites reveal forested conditions around 39 000 BP. During the advance phase of the Fraser Glaciation, glacial lakes were ponded when trunk glaciers blocked some tributary valleys. Early in the glaciation, the drainage was free in easterly draining valleys. Subsequently, the easterly drainage was blocked either locally by sediments and ice or as a result of impoundment of the Fraser River and its tributaries east of the study area. Ice generally moved east and northeast from accumulation zones in the Coast Mountains. Ice flow was influenced by topography. Major late-glacial lakes developed in the Nechako River valley and the Knewstubb Lake region because potential drainage routes were blocked by ice.


2016 ◽  
Vol 85 (3) ◽  
pp. 409-429 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adrian Scott Hickin ◽  
Olav B. Lian ◽  
Victor M. Levson

Geomorphic, stratigraphic and geochronological evidence from northeast British Columbia (Canada) indicates that, during the late Wisconsinan (approximately equivalent to marine oxygen isotope stage [MIS] 2), a major lobe of western-sourced ice coalesced with the northeastern-sourced Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS). High-resolution digital elevation models reveal a continuous 75 km-long field of streamlined landforms that indicate the ice flow direction of a major northeast-flowing lobe of the Cordilleran Ice Sheet (CIS) or a montane glacier (>200 km wide) was deflected to a north-northwest trajectory as it coalesced with the retreating LIS. The streamlined landforms are composed of till containing clasts of eastern provenance that imply that the LIS reached its maximum extent before the western-sourced ice flow crossed the area. Since the LIS only reached this region in the late Wisconsinan, the CIS/montane ice responsible for the streamlined landforms must have occupied the area after the LIS withdrew. Stratigraphy from the Murray and Pine river valleys supports a late Wisconsinan age for the surface landforms and records two glacial events separated by a non-glacial interval that was dated to be of middle Wisconsinan (MIS 3) age.


2008 ◽  
Vol 45 (5) ◽  
pp. 565-575 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michelle Trommelen ◽  
Vic Levson

Exposures in the Prophet River valley in northeast British Columbia provide a unique glimpse into the Quaternary history of the northwest Canadian Boreal Plains. The region shows evidence of Late Wisconsinan Laurentide glaciation in the form of widespread till, containing abundant erratic clasts derived from the Canadian Shield. Vertical sections along the Prophet River expose non-glacial and advance glacial sediments below this till. Pre-Late Wisconsinan non-glacial or interglacial floodplain sediments are interbedded with fluvial gravels at many sites. Macrofossils within horizontally laminated organic-rich black clay and silt indicate deposition on the floodplain of the paleo-Prophet River within an oxbow lake. The climate during deposition is interpreted to be similar to present, supporting a dominantly spruce forest. Wood obtained from eight sites provided non-finite radiocarbon ages, and one sample provided an age of 49 300 ± 2000 BP, which is also considered non-finite. Glaciolacustrine clays and silts, deposited during impoundment of eastward-flowing drainage by the advance of the Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS) in the Late Wisconsinan, overlie the non-glacial sediments throughout the valley. A blanket of clast-poor, clay-rich till up to 20 m thick, and deposited by the LIS, drapes the glaciolacustrine sediments. Since deglaciation, the Prophet River has incised the valley and formed fluvial terraces at different levels above the modern river.


1985 ◽  
Vol 22 (12) ◽  
pp. 1864-1871 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Clark

Ice-flow indicators in the Lake Harbour region of northern Hudson Strait define two flow directions affecting this area during the late Wisconsinan glaciation. A pronounced southward flow direction indicated by medium- and large-scale erosional and depositional features represents ice flow from an ice dome centered to the north, perhaps Foxe Basin and (or) Amadjuak Lake. Carbonate-rich till and striations represent eastward–southeastward ice flow down the axis of Hudson Strait. Convergence of ice-sheet flow with a rapidly moving ice stream has been observed and modelled for West Antarctic ice streams and involves sharp bending of flow lines at the point of convergence. A similar scenario is proposed for the Lake Harbour region to explain the two contrasting ice-flow patterns. Impingement of an ice stream in Hudson Strait onto the southern coast of Baffin Island suggests the influence of northerly flowing ice, perhaps from the Ungava plateau.Radiocarbon dates on marine shells and archeological samples are used to reconstruct the postglacial emergence of the Lake Harbour region. The marine limit (90 m aht) and deglaciation are dated by extrapolation at ca. 8300 years BP. Postglacial emergence is characterized by an initial uplift rate of 4.4 m/100 years, which decreased to 0.2 m/100 years over the last 3900 years. The initial rate (4.4 m/100 years) is nearly 50% lower than rates calculated elsewhere in the Hudson Strait region and is interpreted to reflect the influence of an ice load centered over Amadjuak Lake directly north of the Lake Harbour region.


2007 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 287-299 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barry L. Robert

ABSTRACT A time-dependent ice flow model is used to provide detailed reconstructions of ice growth and retreat for the southern portion of the Late Wisconsinan Cordilleran Ice Sheet. The two-dimensional, time-dependent model provides ice surface elevations and flow directions at a grid spacing of 15 km. Input to the model includes subglacial topography, a net mass balance function, and two ice flow parameters. The net mass balance function uses a polynomial equation to estimate equilibrium line altitude (ELA) across the study area. A quadratic equation is then used to provide net mass balance values as a function of elevation relative to the ELA. Late Wisconsinan glacial conditions are simulated by systematically lowering the ELA. The general timing of the model ice advance and retreat is tested against radiocarbon dated localities which place limits on the ice sheet's areal extent for different times during the Late Wisconsinan glaciation. In addition, glacial-geologic evidence directly attributable to the latest Cordilleran Ice Sheet is used in assessing the model reconstructions. Results from these experiments show that an ice growth and retreat chronology consistent with the limiting radiocarbon dates can be generated using the model, and provide information on flow directions and ice growth and retreat patterns.


2007 ◽  
Vol 42 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-44 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michel Lamothe ◽  
David J. Huntley

ABSTRACT This paper presents the results of a thermoluminescence (TL) dating program applied to waterlaid sediments of Late Pleistocene age, collected in the central St. Lawrence Lowland, in eastern Canada. The apparent TL ages were obtained using a partial bleach method (R-Gamma) in which the TL from light-sensitive traps is separated from the total TL. Fluvial (modern), marine (late-glacial) lacustrine (interstadial) and glacio-lacustrine (stadial) sediments yielded apparent ages ranging from 4 to 135 ka, and in general, these ages agreed with available stratigraphic evidence. Whilst testing the zeroing assumption, apparent TL ages obtained from modern fluvial and late glacial sediments suggest that laboratory overbleaching or insufficient natural bleaching may result in over-estimation of the apparent TL ages by 4-5 ka. All samples display anomalous fading, a problem that can be overcome by introducing a three month delay between artificial irradiation and glowing. Future research should focus on sediments for which the age as well as the sedimentology are well documented, such as the late glacial Champlain Sea sediments.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document