Temporal Constraints for the Late Wisconsinan Deglaciation of Western Canada Using Eolian Dune Luminescence Chronologies From Alberta

The Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS) covered most of Canada during the Last Glacial Maximum. Sometime after 20 cal. ka BP, the LIS began to recede from western Canada and, by 11 cal. ka BP, it had retreated from most of the province of Alberta. Due to the scarcity of datable contemporaneous organic materi...

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Main Authors: Munyikwa, Kennedy, Rittenour, Tammy M., Feathers, James K.
Other Authors: Elsevier BV
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Hosted by Utah State University Libraries 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/geology_facpub/528
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spelling ftutahsudc:oai:digitalcommons.usu.edu:geology_facpub-1527 2023-05-15T15:15:03+02:00 Temporal Constraints for the Late Wisconsinan Deglaciation of Western Canada Using Eolian Dune Luminescence Chronologies From Alberta Munyikwa, Kennedy Rittenour, Tammy M. Feathers, James K. Elsevier BV 2016-12-23T08:00:00Z https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/geology_facpub/528 unknown Hosted by Utah State University Libraries https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/geology_facpub/528 Geosciences Faculty Publications Laurentide Ice Sheet Deglaciation Luminescence dating Eolian dunes Wisconsinan Canada Earth Sciences Geology Physical Sciences and Mathematics text 2016 ftutahsudc 2022-03-07T21:51:45Z The Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS) covered most of Canada during the Last Glacial Maximum. Sometime after 20 cal. ka BP, the LIS began to recede from western Canada and, by 11 cal. ka BP, it had retreated from most of the province of Alberta. Due to the scarcity of datable contemporaneous organic materials, the precise timing of the retreat of the ice sheet from the region remains poorly constrained so that the chronology of the sequential positions of the ice sheet margin between 20 and 11 cal. ka BP is largely tentative. In this study, we use luminescence dating of postglacial eolian deposits, sourced primarily from glaciolacustrine and deltaic sediments in central and northern Alberta, to provide an updated chronology for the retreat of the LIS from the region. We examine 14 new and 13 previously published quartz optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) ages, as well as 19 previously published K-feldspar infrared stimulated luminescence ages. The chronologies are used to constrain successive regional ice sheet margin positions that are geomorphically recognizable across the region between 16 and 11 ka (calendar years). These data suggest that the LIS may have retreated from central Alberta earlier than portrayed in radiocarbon derived deglaciation models. We propose that the OSL chronology from postglacial dunes constrains the deglaciation of the region more accurately because luminescence dating does not rely on the development of vegetation to produce material for dating. Implications for the revised chronology include an improved timing of the emergence of an ice-free corridor that may have been used for Paleoindian migration into the Americas as well as enhanced age constraints on when meltwater drainage routes to the Arctic became open in relationship to the Younger Dryas. The chronology could also provide improved constraints for geophysical models that reconstruct regional isostatic rebound which followed deglaciation. Text Arctic Ice Sheet Utah State University: DigitalCommons@USU Arctic Canada
institution Open Polar
collection Utah State University: DigitalCommons@USU
op_collection_id ftutahsudc
language unknown
topic Laurentide Ice Sheet
Deglaciation
Luminescence dating
Eolian dunes
Wisconsinan
Canada
Earth Sciences
Geology
Physical Sciences and Mathematics
spellingShingle Laurentide Ice Sheet
Deglaciation
Luminescence dating
Eolian dunes
Wisconsinan
Canada
Earth Sciences
Geology
Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Munyikwa, Kennedy
Rittenour, Tammy M.
Feathers, James K.
Temporal Constraints for the Late Wisconsinan Deglaciation of Western Canada Using Eolian Dune Luminescence Chronologies From Alberta
topic_facet Laurentide Ice Sheet
Deglaciation
Luminescence dating
Eolian dunes
Wisconsinan
Canada
Earth Sciences
Geology
Physical Sciences and Mathematics
description The Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS) covered most of Canada during the Last Glacial Maximum. Sometime after 20 cal. ka BP, the LIS began to recede from western Canada and, by 11 cal. ka BP, it had retreated from most of the province of Alberta. Due to the scarcity of datable contemporaneous organic materials, the precise timing of the retreat of the ice sheet from the region remains poorly constrained so that the chronology of the sequential positions of the ice sheet margin between 20 and 11 cal. ka BP is largely tentative. In this study, we use luminescence dating of postglacial eolian deposits, sourced primarily from glaciolacustrine and deltaic sediments in central and northern Alberta, to provide an updated chronology for the retreat of the LIS from the region. We examine 14 new and 13 previously published quartz optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) ages, as well as 19 previously published K-feldspar infrared stimulated luminescence ages. The chronologies are used to constrain successive regional ice sheet margin positions that are geomorphically recognizable across the region between 16 and 11 ka (calendar years). These data suggest that the LIS may have retreated from central Alberta earlier than portrayed in radiocarbon derived deglaciation models. We propose that the OSL chronology from postglacial dunes constrains the deglaciation of the region more accurately because luminescence dating does not rely on the development of vegetation to produce material for dating. Implications for the revised chronology include an improved timing of the emergence of an ice-free corridor that may have been used for Paleoindian migration into the Americas as well as enhanced age constraints on when meltwater drainage routes to the Arctic became open in relationship to the Younger Dryas. The chronology could also provide improved constraints for geophysical models that reconstruct regional isostatic rebound which followed deglaciation.
author2 Elsevier BV
format Text
author Munyikwa, Kennedy
Rittenour, Tammy M.
Feathers, James K.
author_facet Munyikwa, Kennedy
Rittenour, Tammy M.
Feathers, James K.
author_sort Munyikwa, Kennedy
title Temporal Constraints for the Late Wisconsinan Deglaciation of Western Canada Using Eolian Dune Luminescence Chronologies From Alberta
title_short Temporal Constraints for the Late Wisconsinan Deglaciation of Western Canada Using Eolian Dune Luminescence Chronologies From Alberta
title_full Temporal Constraints for the Late Wisconsinan Deglaciation of Western Canada Using Eolian Dune Luminescence Chronologies From Alberta
title_fullStr Temporal Constraints for the Late Wisconsinan Deglaciation of Western Canada Using Eolian Dune Luminescence Chronologies From Alberta
title_full_unstemmed Temporal Constraints for the Late Wisconsinan Deglaciation of Western Canada Using Eolian Dune Luminescence Chronologies From Alberta
title_sort temporal constraints for the late wisconsinan deglaciation of western canada using eolian dune luminescence chronologies from alberta
publisher Hosted by Utah State University Libraries
publishDate 2016
url https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/geology_facpub/528
geographic Arctic
Canada
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
genre Arctic
Ice Sheet
genre_facet Arctic
Ice Sheet
op_source Geosciences Faculty Publications
op_relation https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/geology_facpub/528
_version_ 1766345433526829056