Reconstructing Glacial History from Forests Preserved in the Wake of the Catastrophic Retreating Columbia and Wooster Glaciers, Prince William Sound, Alaska

Columbia Glacier, the largest tidewater glacier in Prince William Sound, has undergone a drastic 20 km retreat within the past 36 years. In the wake of this catastrophic retreat, previously overrun and partially buried mountain hemlock forests along the banks of the fjord and within tributary valley...

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Main Author: Starr, Kaitlin N
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Open Works 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://openworks.wooster.edu/independentstudy/7079
https://openworks.wooster.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=8339&context=independentstudy
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spelling ftcollegewooster:oai:openworks.wooster.edu:independentstudy-8339 2023-05-15T16:20:21+02:00 Reconstructing Glacial History from Forests Preserved in the Wake of the Catastrophic Retreating Columbia and Wooster Glaciers, Prince William Sound, Alaska Starr, Kaitlin N 2016-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://openworks.wooster.edu/independentstudy/7079 https://openworks.wooster.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=8339&context=independentstudy English (United States) eng Open Works https://openworks.wooster.edu/independentstudy/7079 https://openworks.wooster.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=8339&context=independentstudy Senior Independent Study Theses glaciers alaska holocene Geology text 2016 ftcollegewooster 2022-04-27T05:46:00Z Columbia Glacier, the largest tidewater glacier in Prince William Sound, has undergone a drastic 20 km retreat within the past 36 years. In the wake of this catastrophic retreat, previously overrun and partially buried mountain hemlock forests along the banks of the fjord and within tributary valleys have been uncovered. Tree-ring dating of these recovered logs provide calendar dates of the glacial advance of Columbia Glacier. These tree-ring records extend back to approximately 1000 CE. As a result of the recent glacial retreat, thousands of new logs have been uncovered. During the summers of 2014 and 2015, College of Wooster students and faculty traveled to Columbia Bay collecting approximately 400 samples of these exposed logs. From those samples collected, 104 of them underwent tree-ring analysis and calendar dating. These new calendar dates expand and extend the established glacial advance history of both Columbia Glacier and its land terminating distributary glacier, once referred to as the Land Lobe (unofficial name), here referred to as the Wooster Glacier (unofficial name). These new samples help replicate data and strengthen the established chronologies for both the Columbia and Wooster Glaciers. The 2014 sampling of the East Branch site (the closest sample site to the current calving margin of the glacier) provided new kill dates that extend the glacial advance records from 1020 CE to as early as 1000 CE. This study also provided additional kill dates for the Wooster Glacier ranging from the years 1770 CE -1784 CE. Furthermore, these additional tree-ring dates allows for the calculation of advance and thickening rates within Columbia Bay. The 2014 collection indicated the Columbia Glacier was advancing at a rate of 45 meters per year. The 2014 data shows that Columbia Glacier was thickening at a rate of 8 meters per year opposed to the 1.5 meters per year thickening rate of the Wooster Glacier determined by the 2015 data. Comparison of other land terminating glacial records and the Gulf of Alaska temperature reconstructions conclude that the timing of the Wooster Glacier’s advance and retreat are influenced by the dynamics of the Columbia Glacier rather than being controlled exclusively by climate. Text glacier glaciers Tidewater Alaska The College of Wooster: Open Works Gulf of Alaska
institution Open Polar
collection The College of Wooster: Open Works
op_collection_id ftcollegewooster
language English
topic glaciers
alaska
holocene
Geology
spellingShingle glaciers
alaska
holocene
Geology
Starr, Kaitlin N
Reconstructing Glacial History from Forests Preserved in the Wake of the Catastrophic Retreating Columbia and Wooster Glaciers, Prince William Sound, Alaska
topic_facet glaciers
alaska
holocene
Geology
description Columbia Glacier, the largest tidewater glacier in Prince William Sound, has undergone a drastic 20 km retreat within the past 36 years. In the wake of this catastrophic retreat, previously overrun and partially buried mountain hemlock forests along the banks of the fjord and within tributary valleys have been uncovered. Tree-ring dating of these recovered logs provide calendar dates of the glacial advance of Columbia Glacier. These tree-ring records extend back to approximately 1000 CE. As a result of the recent glacial retreat, thousands of new logs have been uncovered. During the summers of 2014 and 2015, College of Wooster students and faculty traveled to Columbia Bay collecting approximately 400 samples of these exposed logs. From those samples collected, 104 of them underwent tree-ring analysis and calendar dating. These new calendar dates expand and extend the established glacial advance history of both Columbia Glacier and its land terminating distributary glacier, once referred to as the Land Lobe (unofficial name), here referred to as the Wooster Glacier (unofficial name). These new samples help replicate data and strengthen the established chronologies for both the Columbia and Wooster Glaciers. The 2014 sampling of the East Branch site (the closest sample site to the current calving margin of the glacier) provided new kill dates that extend the glacial advance records from 1020 CE to as early as 1000 CE. This study also provided additional kill dates for the Wooster Glacier ranging from the years 1770 CE -1784 CE. Furthermore, these additional tree-ring dates allows for the calculation of advance and thickening rates within Columbia Bay. The 2014 collection indicated the Columbia Glacier was advancing at a rate of 45 meters per year. The 2014 data shows that Columbia Glacier was thickening at a rate of 8 meters per year opposed to the 1.5 meters per year thickening rate of the Wooster Glacier determined by the 2015 data. Comparison of other land terminating glacial records and the Gulf of Alaska temperature reconstructions conclude that the timing of the Wooster Glacier’s advance and retreat are influenced by the dynamics of the Columbia Glacier rather than being controlled exclusively by climate.
format Text
author Starr, Kaitlin N
author_facet Starr, Kaitlin N
author_sort Starr, Kaitlin N
title Reconstructing Glacial History from Forests Preserved in the Wake of the Catastrophic Retreating Columbia and Wooster Glaciers, Prince William Sound, Alaska
title_short Reconstructing Glacial History from Forests Preserved in the Wake of the Catastrophic Retreating Columbia and Wooster Glaciers, Prince William Sound, Alaska
title_full Reconstructing Glacial History from Forests Preserved in the Wake of the Catastrophic Retreating Columbia and Wooster Glaciers, Prince William Sound, Alaska
title_fullStr Reconstructing Glacial History from Forests Preserved in the Wake of the Catastrophic Retreating Columbia and Wooster Glaciers, Prince William Sound, Alaska
title_full_unstemmed Reconstructing Glacial History from Forests Preserved in the Wake of the Catastrophic Retreating Columbia and Wooster Glaciers, Prince William Sound, Alaska
title_sort reconstructing glacial history from forests preserved in the wake of the catastrophic retreating columbia and wooster glaciers, prince william sound, alaska
publisher Open Works
publishDate 2016
url https://openworks.wooster.edu/independentstudy/7079
https://openworks.wooster.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=8339&context=independentstudy
geographic Gulf of Alaska
geographic_facet Gulf of Alaska
genre glacier
glaciers
Tidewater
Alaska
genre_facet glacier
glaciers
Tidewater
Alaska
op_source Senior Independent Study Theses
op_relation https://openworks.wooster.edu/independentstudy/7079
https://openworks.wooster.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=8339&context=independentstudy
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