Identifying glacio–isostatic rebound processes using testate amoeba as palaeohydrological proxies; a case study from subarctic Québec, Canada

Glacio–isostatic rebound is one of the most important landscape processes affecting the northern and northeastern coast of Canada and, therefore, reconstruction of postglacial rebound rates is critical for a better understanding of landscape evolution in this region. Yet, studies reconstructing coas...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Revista de Geomorfologie
Main Authors: Crystal FERGUSON, Florin PENDEA
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
French
Published: Romanian Association of Geomorphologists 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.21094/rg.2018.008
https://doaj.org/article/c22e85a07b65411ca92cb91077278492
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Summary:Glacio–isostatic rebound is one of the most important landscape processes affecting the northern and northeastern coast of Canada and, therefore, reconstruction of postglacial rebound rates is critical for a better understanding of landscape evolution in this region. Yet, studies reconstructing coastal palaeogeography in Northern Canada are constrained by the limitation of shell–based radiocarbon chronologies used in dating shoreline displacement and palaeo–sea levels. This study proposes an alternative methodology for the reconstruction and dating of palaeo–sea levels, which uses testate amoeba microfossils from coastal sediments as palaeoecological markers of coastal water table shifts linked to sea level change. Our results indicate that testate amoeba–inferred water table reconstruction is a good indicator of water table drawdown due to isostatic uplift on affected coastlines. Furthermore, radiocarbon dating of distinct plant macrofossils within the transitional marine/freshwater stratigraphy avoids the inherent reservoir effect issues associated with dating of marine shells.