CGRG Bibliography of Canadian Geomorphology
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Author : Beierle , B.; and Smith, D.G.
Date : 1998
Title : Severe drought in the early Holocene (10,000--6800 BP)interpreted from lake sediment cores, southwestern Alberta,Canada.
Publication : Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology
Issue : 140(1-4):
Page(s) : 75-83.
Abstract
Six lake sediment vibracores from the foothills and mountain valleys of southwestern Alberta were analysed on the basis ofAMS radiocarbon dates, tephrochronology and sediment geochemistry. From these results, the magnitude, timing and duration of the early Holocene warm period are presented. At about 10,000 BP, immediately following the Younger Dryas cold period, climate warmed dramatically, precipitation decreased and surface evaporation increased. Previous research has identified this warm interval, but new results have improved resolution of regional scale effects, specific timing and severity. Sedimentation changed from extra-basinal elastic to intra-basinal organic between 10,000 and 9400 BP. Changes in subalpine lakes from sand/silt deposition to biogenic carbonate precipitation suggest decreases in suspended sediment load caused by complete ablation of glacial sediment sources. Feat which formed in lakes of less than 4 m (present depth) indicates climate-induced lake level lowering in the foothills. Water depth and stratigraphic position of the pear suggest that regional water table levels decreased by up to 6.5 m. At Cartwright Lake, an erosional unconformity 6.5 m below the modern lake surface indicates the lake had completely dried out either during or immediately after Mazama tephra time (6800 BP).
Bibliography of Canadian Geomorphology