Late Wisconsinan stratigraphy and chronology at Highlands, southern St. George’s Bay, southwest Newfoundland
This paper provides detailed sedimentological and chronological data of coastal exposures at Highlands in southern St. George’s Bay, southwest Newfoundland. The Highlands section shows a coarsening upward sequence from mud to sand and gravel, and diamicton, and represents an ice-distal to ice-proxim...
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Format: | Text |
Language: | English |
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Online Access: | http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.460.1759 http://www.mun.ca/geog/people/faculty/tbell/PDF_18.pdf |
Summary: | This paper provides detailed sedimentological and chronological data of coastal exposures at Highlands in southern St. George’s Bay, southwest Newfoundland. The Highlands section shows a coarsening upward sequence from mud to sand and gravel, and diamicton, and represents an ice-distal to ice-proximal glaciomarine environment, where sediment was introduced via a subglacial meltwater jet and deposited by under#ow, current #ow, debris #ow, and over#ow on a grounding-line fan. Diamicton forms a continuous unit along the top of the section, grading laterally from structureless to strati"ed, and has characteristics of subglacial, sediment gravity #ow, and rainout depositional processes. At one site, a fossiliferous diamicton is interpreted to be deposited by rainout through a combination of suspension settling from meltwater plumes and ice rafting, with subsequent modi"cation by sediment gravity #ow on the fan slope. A radiocarbon date of 13,680$90 BP (Beta-120124) on paired shells from this diamicton is interpreted to represent the date of its emplacement. This date lies within the range of all other dates (&13.1}14 ka BP) on marine organisms from sediments along the coast of southern St. George’s Bay, and suggests that deposition of the diamicton was contemporaneous with sedimentation in all areas along the coast. Evidence to support a previously interpreted late-glacial readvance at&12.6 ka BP was not found. ( 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd and INQUA. All rights reserved. 1. |
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