CGRG Bibliography of Canadian Geomorphology
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Author : Clague, J.J.; Luternauer, J.L.; Pullan, S.E.; and Hunter, J.A.
Date : 1991
Title : Postglacial deltaic sediments, southern Fraser River delta, British Columbia
Publication : Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences
Issue : 28(9):
Page(s) : 1386-1393
Abstract
The Fraser River delta, the largest delta on the west coast of Canada, has been built into the Strait of Georgia during the Holocene. Drill-hole and seismic reflection records reveal asuccession of sedimentary units deposited during early Holocene progradation of the delta. These overlie an irregular surface developed on Pleistocene drift. Mud and silt, similar tosediments presently accumulating off the mouth of Fraser River in the southern Strait of Georgia, are comformably overlain by a thick unit of sandy foreset beds, dipping gently to the south-southwest into Boundary Bay and deposited in a foreslope environment. The forest unit is sharply overlain by a much thinner topset sequence comprising silt and sanddeposited in intertidal, fluvial-channel, and overbank environments, and peat deposited in swamps and bogs. Fifteen accelerator mass spectrometry radiocarbon dates on shell and wood indicate that most of the deltaic sediments south of the Main Channel of Fraser River were deposited between ca. 7500 and 5000 BP. By 5000 BP the locus of sedimentation had shifted from the south, into Boundary Bay, to the west and southwest, into the Strait of Georgia proper.
Bibliography of Canadian Geomorphology