Titre | A new water-level history for Lake Ontario basin: evidence for a climate-driven early Holocene lowstand |
Auteur | Anderson, T W; Lewis, C F M |
Source | Journal of Paleolimnology vol. 47, issue 3, 2012 p. 513-530, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10933-011-9551-8 |
Année | 2012 |
Séries alt. | Secteur des sciences de la Terre, Contribution externe 20100263 |
Éditeur | Springer Nature |
Document | publication en série |
Lang. | anglais |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1007/s10933-011-9551-8 |
Media | papier; en ligne; numérique |
Formats | pdf |
Province | Ontario |
SNRC | 30M; 30N |
Région | Lac Ontario |
Lat/Long OENS | -80.0000 -76.0000 44.0000 43.0000 |
Sujets | niveaux d'eau; eaux lacustres; profondeurs des eaux lacustres; Holocène; datations au radiocarbone; datation au radiocarbone; hydrogéologie; géochronologie; Nature et environnement; Cénozoïque |
Illustrations | cartes de localisation; graphiques |
Programme | Géosciences de changements climatiques, Études paléo-environnementales sur les changements climatiques |
Diffusé | 2011 10 08 |
Résumé | (disponible en anglais seulement) Piston cores from deep-water bottom deposits in Lake Ontario contain shallow-water sediments such as, shell-rich sand and silt, marl, gyttja, and formerly
exposed shore deposits including woody detritus, peat, sand and gravel, that are indicative of past periods of significantly lower water levels. These and other water-level indicators such as changes in rates of sedimentation, mollusc shells, pollen,
and plant macrofossils were integrated to derive a new water-level history for Lake Ontario basin using an empirical model of isostatic adjustment for the Great Lakes basin to restore dated remnants of former lake levels to their original elevations.
The earliest dated low-level feature is the Grimsby-Oakville bar which was constructed in the western end of the lake during a near stillstand at 11 - 10.4 (12.9 - 12.3 cal) ka BP when Early Lake Ontario was confluent with the Champlain Sea. Rising
Lake Ontario basin outlet sills, a consequence of differential isostatic rebound, severed the connection with Champlain Sea and, in combination with the switch of inflowing Lake Algonquin drainage northward to Ottawa River valley via outlets near
North Bay and an early Holocene dry climate with enhanced evaporation, forced Lake Ontario into a basin-wide lowstand between 10.4 and 7.5 (12.3 and 8.3 cal) ka BP. During this time, Lake Ontario operated as a closed basin with no outlets, and sites
such as Hamilton Harbour, Bay of Quinte, Henderson Harbor, and a site near Amherst Island existed as small isolated basins above the main lake characterized by shallow-water, lagoonal or marsh deposits and fossils indicative of littoral habitats and
newly exposed mudflats. Rising lake levels resulting from increased atmospheric water supply brought Lake Ontario above the outlet sills into an open, overflowing state ending the closed phase of the lake by *7.5 (8.3 cal) ka BP. Lake levels
continued to rise steadily above the Thousand Islands sill through mid-to-late Holocene time culminating at the level of modern Lake Ontario. The early and middle Holocene lake-level changes are supported by temperature and precipitation trends
derived from pollen-climate transfer functions applied to Roblin Lake on the north side of Lake Ontario. |
GEOSCAN ID | 287140 |
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