Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-v9fdk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-02T18:55:08.220Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A 16,000-yr-long sedimentary sequence from Lakes Peters and Schrader (Neruokpuk Lakes), northeastern Brooks Range, Alaska

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 August 2019

Christopher W. Benson
Affiliation:
School of Earth and Sustainability, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, Arizona 86011-4099, USA
Darrell S. Kaufman*
Affiliation:
School of Earth and Sustainability, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, Arizona 86011-4099, USA
Nicholas P. McKay
Affiliation:
School of Earth and Sustainability, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, Arizona 86011-4099, USA
Erik Schiefer
Affiliation:
Geography, Planning, and Recreation, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, Arizona 86011, USA
David Fortin
Affiliation:
School of Earth and Sustainability, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, Arizona 86011-4099, USA Department of Geography and Planning, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan S7N 5C8, Canada
*
*Corresponding author e-mail address: [email protected] (D.S. Kaufman).

Abstract

Sediments that accumulate in high-latitude lakes serve as valuable environmental archives of changing conditions in a region currently undergoing rapid change. A previously unexplored sedimentary sequence reaching back 16,000 years from Lakes Peters and Schrader (Neruokpuk Lakes) in the northeastern Brooks Range (69°N), Alaska, shows distinct changes in accumulation rates and biophysical properties including bulk density (BD), organic matter (OM) content, and grain-size distribution at five widely distributed core sites. The oldest sediments contain little OM and accumulated rapidly as glaciers retreated around 15 ka. OM peaked between 12 and 10 ka along with Northern Hemisphere summer insolation. BD increased and OM decreased until around 5 ka, possibly reflecting a decrease in river-transported terrestrial OM. From 5–2 ka, OM consistently increased, suggesting a rise in river discharge, or a rise in summer temperatures, which led to higher productivity, or both. After 2 ka, sediments increased in BD and decreased in OM, suggesting glacier growth. Evidence for glacier expansion late during the Little Ice Age is weak, but increased sedimentation rates may reflect glacier retreat during the last century. This study provides a framework for future paleoenvironmental research of a rare archive in a relatively pristine Arctic setting.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Washington. Published by Cambridge University Press, 2019 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Anderson, L., Abbott, M.B., Finney, B.P., 2001. Holocene climate inferred from oxygen isotope ratios in lake sediments, central Brooks Range, Alaska. Quaternary Research 55, 313321.Google Scholar
Anderson, P.M., 1988. Late Quaternary pollen records from the Kobuk and Noatak River drainages, northwestern Alaska. Quaternary Research 29, 263276.Google Scholar
Anderson, P.M., Brubaker, L.B., 1994. Vegetation history of north central Alaska: a mapped summary of late-Quaternary pollen data. Quaternary Science Reviews 41, 306315.Google Scholar
Badding, M.E., Briner, J.P., Kaufman, D.S., 2013. 10Be ages of late Pleistocene deglaciation and Neoglaciation in the north-central Brooks Range, Arctic Alaska. Journal of Quaternary Science 28, 95102.Google Scholar
Bakke, J., Lie, Ø., Nesje, A., Dahl, S.O., Paasche, Ø., 2005. Utilizing physical sediment variability in glacier-fed lakes for continuous glacier reconstructions during the Holocene, northern Folgefonna, western Norway. Holocene 15, 161176.Google Scholar
Balascio, N.L., Kaufman, D.S., Briner, J.P., Manley, W.F., 2005. Late Pleistocene glacial geology of the Okpilak-Kongakut Rivers region, northeastern Brooks Range, Alaska. Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research 37, 416424.Google Scholar
Ballantyne, C.K., Benn, D.I., 1994. Paraglacial slope adjustment and resedimentation following recent glacier retreat, Fåbergstølsdalen, Norway. Arctic and Alpine Research 26, 255–69.Google Scholar
Barclay, D.J., Wiles, G.C., Calkin, P.E., 2009. Holocene glacier fluctuations in Alaska. Quaternary Science Reviews 28, 20342048.Google Scholar
Benson, C.W., 2018. 16,000 Years of Paleoenvironmental Change from the Lake Peters-Schrader Area, Northeastern Brooks Range, Alaska. Master's thesis, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff.Google Scholar
Berger, A., Loutre, M.F., 1991. Insolation values for the climate of the last 10 million years. Quaternary Science Reviews 10, 297317.Google Scholar
Blaauw, M., 2010. Methods and code for “classical” age-modelling of radiocarbon sequences. Quaternary Geochronology 5, 512518.Google Scholar
Boisvert, L.N., Stroeve, J.C., 2015. The Arctic is becoming warmer and wetter as revealed by the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder. Geophysical Research Letters 42, 44394446.Google Scholar
Boldt, B.R., Kaufman, D.S., McKay, N.P., Briner, J.P., 2015. Holocene summer temperature reconstruction from sedimentary chlorophyll content, with treatment of age uncertainties, Kurupa Lake, Arctic Alaska. Holocene 25, 641650.Google Scholar
Briner, J.P., Kaufman, D.S., Manley, W.F., Finkel, R.C., Caffee, M.W., 2005. Cosmogenic exposure dating of late Pleistocene moraine stabilization in Alaska. Geological Society of America Bulletin 117, 11081120.Google Scholar
Briner, J.P., Tulenko, J.P., Kaufman, D.S., Young, N.E., Baichtal, J.F., Lesnek, A., 2017. The last deglaciation of Alaska. Cuadernos de Investigación Geográfica 43, 429448.Google Scholar
Bringué, M., Rochon, A., 2012. Late Holocene paleoceanography and climate variability over the Mackenzie slope (Beaufort Sea, Canadian Arctic). Marine Geology 291–294, 8396.Google Scholar
Broadman, E., Thurston, L.L., McKay, N.P., Kaufman, D.S., Schiefer, E., Fortin, D., Geck, J., et al. , 2019. An Arctic watershed observatory at Lake Peters, Alaska: weather-glacier-river-lake system data for 2015-2018. Earth System Science Data Discussions. https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-2019-60.Google Scholar
Calkin, P.E., 1988. Holocene glaciation of Alaska (and adjoining Yukon Territory, Canada). Quaternary Science Reviews 7, 159184.Google Scholar
Church, M., Ryder, J.M., 1972. Paraglacial sedimentation: a consideration of fluvial processes conditioned by glaciation. Geological Society of American Bulletin 83, 30593071.Google Scholar
Clegg, B.F., Hu, F.S., 2010. An oxygen-isotope record of Holocene climate change in the south-central Brooks Range, Alaska. Quaternary Science Reviews 29, 928939.Google Scholar
Denton, G.H., Alley, R.B., Comer, G.C., Broecker, W.S., 2005. The role of seasonality in abrupt climate change. Quaternary Science Reviews 24, 11591182.Google Scholar
Evison, L., Calkin, P.E., Ellis, J.M., 1996. Late-Holocene glaciation and twentieth century retreat, northeastern Brooks Range, Alaska. Holocene 6, 1724.Google Scholar
Farmer, J.R., Cronin, T.M., de Vernal, A., Dwyer, G.S., Keigwin, L.D., Thunell, R.C., 2011. Western Arctic Ocean temperature variability during the last 8000 years. Geophysical Research Letters 38, L24602.Google Scholar
Finkenbinder, M.S., Abbott, M.B., Finney, B.P., Stoner, J.S., Dorfman, J.M., 2015. A multi-proxy reconstruction of environmental change spanning the last 37,000 years from Burial Lake, Arctic Alaska. Quaternary Science Reviews 126, 227241.Google Scholar
Gaglioti, B.V., Mann, D.H., Wooller, M.J., Jones, B.M., Wiles, G.C., Groves, P., Kunz, M.L., Baughman, C.A., Reanier, R.E., 2017. Younger-Dryas cooling and sea-ice feedbacks were prominent features of the Pleistocene-Holocene transition in Arctic Alaska. Quaternary Science Reviews 169, 330343.Google Scholar
Gilli, A., Anselmetti, F.S., Glur, L., Wirth, S.B., 2013. Lake sediments as archives of recurrence rates and intensities of past flood events. In: Schneuwly-Bollschweiler, M., Stoffel, M., Rudolf-Miklau, F. (Eds.), Dating Torrential Processes on Fans and Cones – Methods and Their Application for Hazard and Risk Assessment. Advances in Global Change Research 47. Springer, Dordrecht, the Netherlands, pp. 225242.Google Scholar
Gubala, C.P., Landers, D.H., Monetti, M., Heit, M., Wade, T., Lasorsa, B., Allen-Gil, S., 1995. The rates of accumulation and chronologies of atmospherically derived pollutants in Arctic Alaska, USA. Science of the Total Environment 160/161, 347361.Google Scholar
Gurnell, A.M., Edwards, P.J., Petts, G.E., Ward, J.V., 1999. A conceptual model for alpine proglacial river channel evolution under changing climatic conditions. Catena 38, 223242.Google Scholar
Hamilton, T.D., 2003. Surficial Geology of the Dalton Highway (Itkillik-Sagavanirktok Rivers) Area, Southern Arctic Foothills. Professional Report, 121. Alaska Department of Natural Resources, Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys, Fairbanks, AK.Google Scholar
Hamilton, T.D., Porter, S.C., 1975. Itkillik glaciation in the Brooks Range, northern Alaska. Quaternary Research 5, 471497.Google Scholar
Hobbie, J.E., 1962. Limnological Cycles and Primary Productivity of Two Lakes of the Alaskan Arctic. PhD dissertation, Indiana University, Bloomington.Google Scholar
Holmes, G.W., Lewis, C.R., 1965. Quaternary geology of the Mount Chamberlin area, Brooks Range, Alaska. U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 1201-B, 138.Google Scholar
Irvine, F., Cwynar, L.C., Vermaire, J.C., Rees, A.B.H., 2012. Midge-inferred temperature reconstructions and vegetation change over the last ~15,000 years from Trout Lake, northern Yukon Territory, eastern Beringia. Journal of Paleolimnology 48, 133146.Google Scholar
Jones, M.C., Yu, Z., 2010. Rapid deglacial and early Holocene expansion of peatlands in Alaska. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 107, 73477352.Google Scholar
Jorgenson, M.T., Heiner, M., 2003. Ecosystems of Northern Alaska. 1:2.5 million-scale map. ABR Inc., Fairbanks, AK; The Nature Conservancy, Anchorage, AK.Google Scholar
Kanevskiy, M., Shur, Y., Jorgenson, M.T., Ping, C.L., Michaelson, G.J., Fortier, D., Stephani, E., Dillon., M., Tumskoy, V., 2013. Ground ice in the upper permafrost of the Beaufort Sea coast of Alaska. Cold Regions Science and Technology 85, 5670.Google Scholar
Kaplan, M.R., Wolfe, A.P., Miller, G.H., 2002. Holocene environmental variability in southern Greenland inferred from lake sediments. Quaternary Research 58, 149159.Google Scholar
Karlén, W., 1976. Lacustrine sediments and tree-limit variations as indicators of Holocene climatic fluctuations in Lappland, northern Sweden. Geografiska Annaler Series A Physical Geography 58, 134.Google Scholar
Kaufman, D.S., Axford, Y., Anderson, R.S., Lamoureux, S.F., Schindler, D.E., Walker, I.R., Werner, A., 2012. A multi-proxy record of the Last Glacial Maximum and last 14,500 years of paleoenvironmental change at Lone Spruce Pond, southwestern Alaska. Journal of Paleolimnology 48, 926.Google Scholar
Kaufman, D.S., Axford, Y.L., Henderson, A.C.G., Mckay, N.P., Oswald, W.W., Saenger, C., Anderson, R.S., et al. , 2016. Holocene climate changes in eastern Beringia (NW North America) – a systematic review of multi-proxy evidence. Quaternary Science Reviews 147, 312339.Google Scholar
Kaufman, D.S., Fortin, D., Broadman, E., Thurston, L.L., Benson, C.W., Schiefer, E., McKay, N.P., et al. , 2019. Weather-Glacier-River-Lake System Data for 2015-2018 from an Arctic Watershed Observatory at Lake Peters, Alaska. National Science Foundation Arctic Data Center (accessed 31 Jul 2019). https://arcticdata.io/catalog/view/doi:10.18739/A2V11VK4J.Google Scholar
Kaufman, D.S., Young, N.E., Briner, J.P., Manley, W.F., 2011. Alaska Palaeo-Glacier Atlas (Version 2). In: Ehlers, J., Gibbard, P.L., Hughes, P.D. (Eds.), Quaternary Glaciations – Extent and Chronology: A Closer Look. Developments in Quaternary Sciences, Vol. 15. Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp. 427445.Google Scholar
Kopec, B.G., Feng, X., Michel, F.A., Posmentier, E.S., 2016. Influence of sea ice on Arctic precipitation. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 113, 4651.Google Scholar
Kurek, J., Cwynar, L.C., Ager, T.A., Abbott, M.B., Edwards, M.E., 2009a. Late Quaternary paleoclimate of western Alaska inferred from fossil chironomids and its relation to vegetation histories. Quaternary Science Reviews 28, 799811.Google Scholar
Kurek, J., Cwynar, L.C., Vermaire, J.C., 2009b. A late Quaternary paleotemperature record from Hanging Lake, northern Yukon Territory, eastern Beringia. Quaternary Research 72, 246257.Google Scholar
Leonard, E.M., 1997. The relationship between glacial activity and sediment production: evidence from a 4450-year varve record of Neoglacial sedimentation in Hector Lake, Alberta, Canada. Journal of Paleolimnology 17, 319330.Google Scholar
Mann, D.H., Peteet, D.M., Reanier, R.E., Kunz, M.L., 2002. Responses of an arctic landscape to lateglacial and early Holocene climatic changes: the importance of moisture. Quaternary Science Reviews 21, 9971021.Google Scholar
Matthews, J.A., Briffa, K.R., 2005. The ‘Little Ice Age’: re-evaluation of an evolving concept. Geografiska Annaler: Series A, Physical Geography 87, 1736.Google Scholar
McKay, N.P., Kaufman, D.S., Routson, C.C., Erb, M., Zander, P.D., 2018. The onset and rate of Holocene Neoglacial cooling in the Arctic. Geophysical Research Letters 45, 1248712496.Google Scholar
Nesje, A., 2009. Latest Pleistocene and Holocene alpine glacier fluctuations in Scandinavia. Quaternary Science Reviews 28, 21192136.Google Scholar
Nesje, A., Dahl, S., 1991. Holocene glacier fluctuations in Bevringsdalen, Jostedalsbreen region, western Norway (ca 3200-1400 BP). Holocene 1, 17.Google Scholar
Noren, A.J., Bierman, P.R., Steig, E.J., Lini, A., Southon, J., 2002. Millennial-scale storminess variability in the northeastern United States during the Holocene epoch. Nature 419, 821824.Google Scholar
Oswald, W.W., Gavin, D.G., Anderson, P.M., Brubaker, L.B., Hu, F.S., 2012. A 14,500-year record of landscape change from Okpilak Lake, northeastern Brooks Range, northern Alaska. Journal of Paleolimnology 48, 101113.Google Scholar
Pendleton, S.L., Briner, J.P., Kaufman, D.S., Zimmerman, S.R., 2017. Using cosmogenic 10Be exposure dating and lichenometry to constrain Holocene glaciation in the central Brooks Range, Alaska. Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research 49, 115132.Google Scholar
Pendleton, S.L., Ceperley, E.G., Briner, J.P., Kaufman, D.S., Zimmerman, S.R., 2015. Rapid and early deglaciation in the central Brooks Range, Arctic Alaska. Geology 43, 419422.Google Scholar
Polyak, L., Belt, S.T., Cabedo-Sanz, P., Yamamoto, M., Park, Y.H., 2016. Holocene sea-ice conditions and circulation at the Chukchi-Alaskan margin, Arctic Ocean, inferred from biomarker proxies. Holocene 26, 18101821.Google Scholar
Rabus, B.T., Echelmeyer, K.A., 1997. The flow of a polythermal glacier: McCall Glacier, Alaska, U.S.A. Journal of Glaciology 43, 522536.Google Scholar
Rabus, B.T., Echelmeyer, K.A., 1998. The mass balance of McCall Glacier, Brooks Range Alaska, USA; its regional relevance and implication for climate change in the Arctic. Journal of Glaciology 44, 333351.Google Scholar
Rasmussen, S.O., Andersen, K.K., Svensson, A.M., Steffensen, J.P., Vinther, B.M., Clausen, H.B., Siggaard-Andersen, M.-L., et al. , 2006. A new Greenland ice core chronology for the last glacial termination. Journal of Geophysical Research 111, D06102.Google Scholar
Reed, B., 1968. Geology of the Lake Peters area northeastern Brooks Range, Alaska. U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 1236, 1132.Google Scholar
Sikorski, J.J., Kaufman, D.S., Manley, W.F., Nolan, M., 2009. Glacial-geologic evidence for decreased precipitation during the ‘Little Ice Age’ in the Brooks Range, Alaska. Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research 41, 138150.Google Scholar
Solomina, O., Bradley, R.S., Hodgson, D.A., Ivy-Ochs, S., Jomelli, V., Mackintosh, A.N., Nesje, A., et al. , 2015. Holocene glacier fluctuations. Quaternary Science Reviews 111, 934.Google Scholar
Steen, D.P., 2016. Late Quaternary Paleomagnetism and Environmental Magnetism at Cascade and Shainin Lakes, North-Central Brooks Range, Alaska. Master's thesis, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff.Google Scholar
Stein, R., Fahl, K., Schade, I., Manerung, A., Wassmuth, S., Niessen, F., Nam, S., 2017. Holocene variability in sea ice cover, primary production, and Pacific-Water inflow and climate change in the Chukchi and East Siberian Seas (Arctic Ocean). Quaternary Science 32, 362379.Google Scholar
Stuiver, M., Reimer, P.J., Reimer, R.W., 2018. CALIB 7.1 (accessed 31 Jul 2019). http://calib.org/calib/.Google Scholar
Thomas, E.K., Szymanski, J., Briner, J.P., 2010. Holocene alpine glaciation inferred from lacustrine sediments on northeastern Baffin Island, Arctic Canada. Journal of Quaternary Science 25, 146161.Google Scholar
Thurston, L., 2017. Modeling Fine-Grained Fluxes for Estimating Sediment Yields and Understanding Hydroclimatic and Geomorphic Processes at Lake Peters, Brooks Range, Arctic Alaska. Master's thesis, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff.Google Scholar
Vachula, R.S., Chipman, M.L., Hu, F.S., 2017. Holocene climatic change in the Alaskan Arctic as inferred from oxygen-isotope and lake-sediment analyses at Wahoo Lake. Holocene 27, 16311644.Google Scholar
Walter Anthony, K.M., Zimov, S.A., Grosse, G., Jones, M.C., Anthony, P.M., Chapin, F.S. III, Finlay, J.C., et al. , 2014. A shift of thermokarst lakes from carbon sources to sinks during the Holocene epoch. Nature 511, 452456.Google Scholar
Wendler, G., Ishikawa, N., Streten, N., 1974. The climate of the McCall Glacier, Brooks Range, Alaska, in relation to its geographical setting. Arctic and Alpine Research 6, 307318.Google Scholar