CGRG Bibliography of Canadian Geomorphology
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Author : Filion, L.; and Begin, Y.
Date : 1998
Title : Recent paludification of kettle holes on the central islands of Lake Bienville, northern Quebec, Canada
Publication : The Holocene
Issue : 8(1):
Page(s) : 91-96.
Abstract
This paper reports on the paludification of kettle holes formed in a proglacial esker complex at Lake Bienville in northern Quebec. Deep hollows on the central island of this large subarctic lake (c. 900 km2), are highly exposed to northeasterly and southwesterly winds over long fetches, and accumulate large amounts of drifting snow ( c. 4 m). Modifications in local snow distribution associated with Holocene vegetation and climate changes contributed to an increased water supply in kettle holes. Podzolic soils with light patches in the B horizon are attributed to differential water circulation during thawing in coarse-textured soils with high moisture supply associated with thicker snow. Peat started to form over well-drained podzolic soil after 600 BP, especially c. 200 BP, when suitable conditions for Sphagnum growth established at the front of snowbeds. The recent development of patchy podzolic soils and paludification of kettle holes are interpreted as the result of a combination of bioclimatic events including: (1) the development of a postfire, open-vegetation cover after c. 1500 BP associated with cooler conditions exacerbated by the presence of a large water body; and (2) the shift from a boreal- to a subarctic-like (wind-controlled) snow regime permitting the accumulation of large amounts of snow and late melting.
Bibliography of Canadian Geomorphology