Investigating the role of the Smoky River watershed on past ice-jam flood regimes at the Peace-Athabasca Delta via analysis of oxbow lake sediment cores
The Peace-Athabasca Delta (PAD) in northern Alberta has been a focus of concern for decades due to decline in frequency and magnitude of ice-jam floods that sustain ecologically and culturally significant shallow perched lakes. Recent changes to the ice-jam flood regime of the PAD have been attribut...
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Format: | Master Thesis |
Language: | English |
Published: |
University of Waterloo
2022
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10012/18351 |
_version_ | 1821737005110788096 |
---|---|
author | Stratton, Mia Simone |
author_facet | Stratton, Mia Simone |
author_sort | Stratton, Mia Simone |
collection | University of Waterloo, Canada: Institutional Repository |
description | The Peace-Athabasca Delta (PAD) in northern Alberta has been a focus of concern for decades due to decline in frequency and magnitude of ice-jam floods that sustain ecologically and culturally significant shallow perched lakes. Recent changes to the ice-jam flood regime of the PAD have been attributed to two main stressors, river regulation and climate change, however, the relative influence of each remains a topic of much scientific debate. Hydroelectric regulation of Peace River flow by the W.A.C. Bennett Dam began in 1968 and is widely considered to be the main cause for reduced flooding at the PAD. Longer temporal perspectives provided by paleolimnological records, however, indicate a decline in flood frequency since the early 1900s as a result of climate change. A large proportion of Peace River flow at the time when spring ice-jams floods typically occur is attributed to snowmelt runoff from unregulated ‘trigger tributaries’ including the Smoky and Wabasca rivers. However, our current understanding of the influence of spring discharge from these tributaries on ice-jam flooding and the subsequent recharge of perched basins at the PAD is restricted to the limited hydrometric data available since 1955. To gain a broader temporal perspective of the contribution of the Smoky River to ice-jam flooding at the PAD, sediment cores from two oxbow lakes adjacent to the Little Smoky River were investigated using paleolimnological techniques. Results from loss-on-ignition, x-ray fluorescence, and grain size collectively provide sensitive indicators of shifting flood regimes in the Smoky River watershed during the past ~160-340 years. Temporal variations in flood influence at the Smoky oxbow lakes and paleolimnological records from oxbow lakes in the Wabasca River watershed and at the PAD were characterized by four distinct phases during the past ~340 years. Phases 1 (~1680-1790) and 3 (~1850-1930) were identified as intervals of stronger flood influence while Phases 2 (~1790-1850) and 4 (~1930-2019) were interpreted as ... |
format | Master Thesis |
genre | Wabasca Wood Buffalo Wood Buffalo National Park |
genre_facet | Wabasca Wood Buffalo Wood Buffalo National Park |
geographic | Wood Buffalo Peace-Athabasca Delta Wabasca Smoky River W.A.C. Bennett Dam Little Smoky River Wabasca River |
geographic_facet | Wood Buffalo Peace-Athabasca Delta Wabasca Smoky River W.A.C. Bennett Dam Little Smoky River Wabasca River |
id | ftunivwaterloo:oai:uwspace.uwaterloo.ca:10012/18351 |
institution | Open Polar |
language | English |
long_lat | ENVELOPE(-112.007,-112.007,57.664,57.664) ENVELOPE(-111.502,-111.502,58.667,58.667) ENVELOPE(-113.919,-113.919,55.987,55.987) ENVELOPE(-117.319,-117.319,56.183,56.183) ENVELOPE(-122.203,-122.203,56.017,56.017) ENVELOPE(-117.636,-117.636,55.667,55.667) ENVELOPE(-115.336,-115.336,58.367,58.367) |
op_collection_id | ftunivwaterloo |
op_relation | http://hdl.handle.net/10012/18351 |
publishDate | 2022 |
publisher | University of Waterloo |
record_format | openpolar |
spelling | ftunivwaterloo:oai:uwspace.uwaterloo.ca:10012/18351 2025-01-17T01:16:17+00:00 Investigating the role of the Smoky River watershed on past ice-jam flood regimes at the Peace-Athabasca Delta via analysis of oxbow lake sediment cores Stratton, Mia Simone 2022-05-12 http://hdl.handle.net/10012/18351 en eng University of Waterloo http://hdl.handle.net/10012/18351 ice-jam flood spring discharge paleolimnology Smoky River Peace-Athabasca Delta oxbow lake Wood Buffalo National Park Master Thesis 2022 ftunivwaterloo 2023-06-10T22:58:16Z The Peace-Athabasca Delta (PAD) in northern Alberta has been a focus of concern for decades due to decline in frequency and magnitude of ice-jam floods that sustain ecologically and culturally significant shallow perched lakes. Recent changes to the ice-jam flood regime of the PAD have been attributed to two main stressors, river regulation and climate change, however, the relative influence of each remains a topic of much scientific debate. Hydroelectric regulation of Peace River flow by the W.A.C. Bennett Dam began in 1968 and is widely considered to be the main cause for reduced flooding at the PAD. Longer temporal perspectives provided by paleolimnological records, however, indicate a decline in flood frequency since the early 1900s as a result of climate change. A large proportion of Peace River flow at the time when spring ice-jams floods typically occur is attributed to snowmelt runoff from unregulated ‘trigger tributaries’ including the Smoky and Wabasca rivers. However, our current understanding of the influence of spring discharge from these tributaries on ice-jam flooding and the subsequent recharge of perched basins at the PAD is restricted to the limited hydrometric data available since 1955. To gain a broader temporal perspective of the contribution of the Smoky River to ice-jam flooding at the PAD, sediment cores from two oxbow lakes adjacent to the Little Smoky River were investigated using paleolimnological techniques. Results from loss-on-ignition, x-ray fluorescence, and grain size collectively provide sensitive indicators of shifting flood regimes in the Smoky River watershed during the past ~160-340 years. Temporal variations in flood influence at the Smoky oxbow lakes and paleolimnological records from oxbow lakes in the Wabasca River watershed and at the PAD were characterized by four distinct phases during the past ~340 years. Phases 1 (~1680-1790) and 3 (~1850-1930) were identified as intervals of stronger flood influence while Phases 2 (~1790-1850) and 4 (~1930-2019) were interpreted as ... Master Thesis Wabasca Wood Buffalo Wood Buffalo National Park University of Waterloo, Canada: Institutional Repository Wood Buffalo ENVELOPE(-112.007,-112.007,57.664,57.664) Peace-Athabasca Delta ENVELOPE(-111.502,-111.502,58.667,58.667) Wabasca ENVELOPE(-113.919,-113.919,55.987,55.987) Smoky River ENVELOPE(-117.319,-117.319,56.183,56.183) W.A.C. Bennett Dam ENVELOPE(-122.203,-122.203,56.017,56.017) Little Smoky River ENVELOPE(-117.636,-117.636,55.667,55.667) Wabasca River ENVELOPE(-115.336,-115.336,58.367,58.367) |
spellingShingle | ice-jam flood spring discharge paleolimnology Smoky River Peace-Athabasca Delta oxbow lake Wood Buffalo National Park Stratton, Mia Simone Investigating the role of the Smoky River watershed on past ice-jam flood regimes at the Peace-Athabasca Delta via analysis of oxbow lake sediment cores |
title | Investigating the role of the Smoky River watershed on past ice-jam flood regimes at the Peace-Athabasca Delta via analysis of oxbow lake sediment cores |
title_full | Investigating the role of the Smoky River watershed on past ice-jam flood regimes at the Peace-Athabasca Delta via analysis of oxbow lake sediment cores |
title_fullStr | Investigating the role of the Smoky River watershed on past ice-jam flood regimes at the Peace-Athabasca Delta via analysis of oxbow lake sediment cores |
title_full_unstemmed | Investigating the role of the Smoky River watershed on past ice-jam flood regimes at the Peace-Athabasca Delta via analysis of oxbow lake sediment cores |
title_short | Investigating the role of the Smoky River watershed on past ice-jam flood regimes at the Peace-Athabasca Delta via analysis of oxbow lake sediment cores |
title_sort | investigating the role of the smoky river watershed on past ice-jam flood regimes at the peace-athabasca delta via analysis of oxbow lake sediment cores |
topic | ice-jam flood spring discharge paleolimnology Smoky River Peace-Athabasca Delta oxbow lake Wood Buffalo National Park |
topic_facet | ice-jam flood spring discharge paleolimnology Smoky River Peace-Athabasca Delta oxbow lake Wood Buffalo National Park |
url | http://hdl.handle.net/10012/18351 |