CGRG Bibliography of Canadian Geomorphology
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Author : Boyd, M.J.
Date : 2000.
Title : Late Quaternary geoarchaeology of the Lauder Sandhills, Southwestern Manitoba, Canada,
Publication : Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation. University of Calgary, Calgary.
Issue :
Page(s) : 300 p.
Abstract
This dissertation presents a multi-analytic reconstruction of the latePleistocene-Holocene history of the south-central glacial Lake Hind basin(Lauder Sandhills region), southwestern Manitoba. Data derived from plantmacrofossils and microfossils (pollen, silicophytoliths, and fungal taxa) areinterpreted in conjunction with lithostratigraphic descriptions. From these linesof evidence, a 10,500-year model of landscape evolution and biotic change isoffered. This model is linked to the archaeological record in order to explainbroad land-use patterns in southern Manitoba. A period of drainage of thesouthern Hind basin prior to ∼10,400 RCYBP is reconstructed from thesedimentological record exposed at a number of cutbank sites adjacent to theSouris River. This process is linked to the final catastrophic flood emanatingfrom glacial Lake Regina. Between ∼10,400 and 9300 RCYBP, changes inspruce pollen frequencies record climatic warming up to approximately the17 C isotherm, interrupted by a brief and sharp cooling trend at ∼10,000 RCYBP. This cooling trend records glacial re-advance during the Emerson Phase of glacial Lake Agassiz. Folsom complex materials within the Hind basin suggest a land-use strategy which included the utilization of recentlydrained proglacial lake surfaces. After ∼9300 RCYBP, but prior to ca. 6700 RCYBP, fining-upward sequences in the study area record the firstincision of the Souris River into the central lake basin. Shortly after 6700RCYBP, thermophilous plant species were present in at least three communities on the edge of the Hind basin. The earliest recorded bur oakpopulations in the Canadian Prairies appear in the study area. At least oneeolian sand sheet was deposited after 6700 RCYBP, followed by a graduallyrising water table throughout at least some of the middle Holocene. Betweenca. 4500 and 2500 RCYBP, a mixed grass prairie ecosystem extensivelycolonized the Hind basin. Some time shortly after ca. 2500 RCYBP a peak infire frequency probably occurred; this trend is linked to the deliberate burning ofprairie by Sonota-Besant bison hunters.
Bibliography of Canadian Geomorphology