Map of glacial limits and possible refugia in the southernAlexander Archipelago, Alaska, during the late Wisconsin glaciation

During the late Wisconsin glaciation (circa 26,000-13,000 carbon-14 yrBP) the Cordilleran glacier complex formed vast ice fields and largeglaciers along the crest of the Coast Mountains. As these glaciersflowed west to the Pacific Ocean, they were joined by local glaciersoriginating on the higher re...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: P.E. Carrara, T.A. Ager, J.F. Baichtal, D. Paco VanSistine
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: USGS Science Data Catalog 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/6392b683-1fab-4296-92cc-10cc2c769050
id dataone:6392b683-1fab-4296-92cc-10cc2c769050
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:6392b683-1fab-4296-92cc-10cc2c769050 2023-11-08T14:14:14+01:00 Map of glacial limits and possible refugia in the southernAlexander Archipelago, Alaska, during the late Wisconsin glaciation P.E. Carrara T.A. Ager J.F. Baichtal D. Paco VanSistine ENVELOPE(-136.27626,-131.12007,57.297565,54.215305) 2003-01-01T00:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/6392b683-1fab-4296-92cc-10cc2c769050 unknown USGS Science Data Catalog snow and ice cover bathymetry geologic history geospatial datasets maps and atlases Glacial limits Bathymetry Cordilleran ice sheet United States of America Alaska Southern Alexander Archipelago 02201 = Prince of Wales-OuterKetchikan 02130 = Ketchikan Gateway 02280 = Wrangell-Petersburg 02220 = Sitka Dataset 2003 dataone:urn:node:USGS_SDC 2023-11-08T13:37:43Z During the late Wisconsin glaciation (circa 26,000-13,000 carbon-14 yrBP) the Cordilleran glacier complex formed vast ice fields and largeglaciers along the crest of the Coast Mountains. As these glaciersflowed west to the Pacific Ocean, they were joined by local glaciersoriginating on the higher reaches of the Alexander Archipelago (Mannand Hamiltion, 1995). This extensive volume of ice was channeled intodeep troughs (present-day fiords) that formed major outlet glaciers,such as the glaciers that occupied Chatham Strait and Dixon Entrance.In several places along the coast, deep glacially scoured submarinetroughs indicate that glaciers reached to the edge of the continentalshelf. For instance, the glacier that extended into the Dixon Entrancetrough is known to have extended to the edge of the continental shelf.Its retreat began sometime after 16,000-15,000 carbon-14 yr BP (Barrieand Conway, 1999). The exact extent of late Wisconsin cordilleran ice in southeasternAlaska is poorly known. Small-scale maps and reports of the regioncommonly show or imply ice extending west to the edge of thecontinental shelf (Capps, 1931; Coulter and others, 1965; Flint, 1971;Pewe, 1975; Denton and Hughes, 1981; and Prest, 1984). These mapsrelied heavily on earlier work, much of it of a reconnaissance nature. The map shows our interpretation of the limit of the Cordilleran icesheet, which is more restricted than previous estimates, and possiblerefugium (an area that escaped the extensive glaciation of the lateWisconsin and so provided a suitable habitat for relict species) in thesouthern Alexander Archipelago during the late Wisconsin glaciation.In addition to the analysis of the bathymetric map, the limits of theCordilleran ice sheet and possible refugia were also identified byanalyses of aerial photographs, USGS topographic maps (1:63,360 and1:250,000 scales), NOAA bathymetric charts (1:20,000 and 1:40,000scales), previous literature, and reconnaissance fieldwork throughoutthe region. Ice-free areas that may have served as refugia include (1)high mountain nunataks (too small to show at map scale), (2)unglaciated ocean-facing slopes and forelands (Dahl, 1946), (3) theouter islands of the Alexander Archipelago (Worley, 1980), and (4)parts of the inner continental shelf exposed by the lowering of sealevel during the late Wisconsin by an estimated 125 m (Bard and others,1990). Dataset Archipelago glacier glaciers Ice Sheet Ketchikan Alaska USGS Science Data Catalog (via DataONE) Conway ENVELOPE(-61.422,-61.422,-62.841,-62.841) Coulter ENVELOPE(-58.033,-58.033,-83.283,-83.283) Flint ENVELOPE(-65.417,-65.417,-67.333,-67.333) Pacific ENVELOPE(-136.27626,-131.12007,57.297565,54.215305)
institution Open Polar
collection USGS Science Data Catalog (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:USGS_SDC
language unknown
topic snow and ice cover
bathymetry
geologic history
geospatial datasets
maps and atlases
Glacial limits
Bathymetry
Cordilleran ice sheet
United States of America
Alaska
Southern Alexander Archipelago
02201 = Prince of Wales-OuterKetchikan
02130 = Ketchikan Gateway
02280 = Wrangell-Petersburg
02220 = Sitka
spellingShingle snow and ice cover
bathymetry
geologic history
geospatial datasets
maps and atlases
Glacial limits
Bathymetry
Cordilleran ice sheet
United States of America
Alaska
Southern Alexander Archipelago
02201 = Prince of Wales-OuterKetchikan
02130 = Ketchikan Gateway
02280 = Wrangell-Petersburg
02220 = Sitka
P.E. Carrara
T.A. Ager
J.F. Baichtal
D. Paco VanSistine
Map of glacial limits and possible refugia in the southernAlexander Archipelago, Alaska, during the late Wisconsin glaciation
topic_facet snow and ice cover
bathymetry
geologic history
geospatial datasets
maps and atlases
Glacial limits
Bathymetry
Cordilleran ice sheet
United States of America
Alaska
Southern Alexander Archipelago
02201 = Prince of Wales-OuterKetchikan
02130 = Ketchikan Gateway
02280 = Wrangell-Petersburg
02220 = Sitka
description During the late Wisconsin glaciation (circa 26,000-13,000 carbon-14 yrBP) the Cordilleran glacier complex formed vast ice fields and largeglaciers along the crest of the Coast Mountains. As these glaciersflowed west to the Pacific Ocean, they were joined by local glaciersoriginating on the higher reaches of the Alexander Archipelago (Mannand Hamiltion, 1995). This extensive volume of ice was channeled intodeep troughs (present-day fiords) that formed major outlet glaciers,such as the glaciers that occupied Chatham Strait and Dixon Entrance.In several places along the coast, deep glacially scoured submarinetroughs indicate that glaciers reached to the edge of the continentalshelf. For instance, the glacier that extended into the Dixon Entrancetrough is known to have extended to the edge of the continental shelf.Its retreat began sometime after 16,000-15,000 carbon-14 yr BP (Barrieand Conway, 1999). The exact extent of late Wisconsin cordilleran ice in southeasternAlaska is poorly known. Small-scale maps and reports of the regioncommonly show or imply ice extending west to the edge of thecontinental shelf (Capps, 1931; Coulter and others, 1965; Flint, 1971;Pewe, 1975; Denton and Hughes, 1981; and Prest, 1984). These mapsrelied heavily on earlier work, much of it of a reconnaissance nature. The map shows our interpretation of the limit of the Cordilleran icesheet, which is more restricted than previous estimates, and possiblerefugium (an area that escaped the extensive glaciation of the lateWisconsin and so provided a suitable habitat for relict species) in thesouthern Alexander Archipelago during the late Wisconsin glaciation.In addition to the analysis of the bathymetric map, the limits of theCordilleran ice sheet and possible refugia were also identified byanalyses of aerial photographs, USGS topographic maps (1:63,360 and1:250,000 scales), NOAA bathymetric charts (1:20,000 and 1:40,000scales), previous literature, and reconnaissance fieldwork throughoutthe region. Ice-free areas that may have served as refugia include (1)high mountain nunataks (too small to show at map scale), (2)unglaciated ocean-facing slopes and forelands (Dahl, 1946), (3) theouter islands of the Alexander Archipelago (Worley, 1980), and (4)parts of the inner continental shelf exposed by the lowering of sealevel during the late Wisconsin by an estimated 125 m (Bard and others,1990).
format Dataset
author P.E. Carrara
T.A. Ager
J.F. Baichtal
D. Paco VanSistine
author_facet P.E. Carrara
T.A. Ager
J.F. Baichtal
D. Paco VanSistine
author_sort P.E. Carrara
title Map of glacial limits and possible refugia in the southernAlexander Archipelago, Alaska, during the late Wisconsin glaciation
title_short Map of glacial limits and possible refugia in the southernAlexander Archipelago, Alaska, during the late Wisconsin glaciation
title_full Map of glacial limits and possible refugia in the southernAlexander Archipelago, Alaska, during the late Wisconsin glaciation
title_fullStr Map of glacial limits and possible refugia in the southernAlexander Archipelago, Alaska, during the late Wisconsin glaciation
title_full_unstemmed Map of glacial limits and possible refugia in the southernAlexander Archipelago, Alaska, during the late Wisconsin glaciation
title_sort map of glacial limits and possible refugia in the southernalexander archipelago, alaska, during the late wisconsin glaciation
publisher USGS Science Data Catalog
publishDate 2003
url https://search.dataone.org/view/6392b683-1fab-4296-92cc-10cc2c769050
op_coverage ENVELOPE(-136.27626,-131.12007,57.297565,54.215305)
long_lat ENVELOPE(-61.422,-61.422,-62.841,-62.841)
ENVELOPE(-58.033,-58.033,-83.283,-83.283)
ENVELOPE(-65.417,-65.417,-67.333,-67.333)
ENVELOPE(-136.27626,-131.12007,57.297565,54.215305)
geographic Conway
Coulter
Flint
Pacific
geographic_facet Conway
Coulter
Flint
Pacific
genre Archipelago
glacier
glaciers
Ice Sheet
Ketchikan
Alaska
genre_facet Archipelago
glacier
glaciers
Ice Sheet
Ketchikan
Alaska
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