Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-lj6df Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-14T15:17:46.011Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Black Mats, Spring-Fed Streams, and Late-Glacial-Age Recharge in the Southern Great Basin

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Jay Quade
Affiliation:
Desert Laboratory/Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, 85721
Richard M. Forester
Affiliation:
U.S. Geological Survey, MS 980, Denver Federal Center, Colorado, 80225-0046
William L. Pratt
Affiliation:
Museum of Natural History, University of Nevada at Las Vegas, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89154
Claire Carter
Affiliation:
U.S. Geological Survey, MS 915, 345 Middlefield Road, Menlo Park, California, 94025

Abstract

Black mats are prominent features of the late Pleistocene and Holocene stratigraphic record in the southern Great Basin. Faunal, geochemical, and sedimentological evidence shows that the black mats formed in several microenvironments related to spring discharge, ranging from wet meadows to shallow ponds. Small land snails such as Gastrocopta tappaniana and Vertigo berryi are the most common mollusk taxa present. Semiaquatic and aquatic taxa are less abundant and include Catinellids, Fossaria parva, Gyraulus parvus, and others living today in and around perennial seeps and ponds. The ostracodes Cypridopsis okeechobi and Scottia tumida, typical of seeps and low-discharge springs today, as well as other taxa typical of springs and wetlands, are common in the black mats. Several new species that lived in the saturated subsurface also are present, but lacustrine ostracodes are absent. The δ13C values of organic matter in the black mats range from −12 to −26‰, reflecting contributions of tissue from both C3 (sedges, most shrubs and trees) and C4 (saltbush, saltgrass) plants. Carbon-14 dates on the humate fraction of 55 black mats fall between 11,800 to 6300 and 2300 14C yr B.P. to modern. The total absence of mats in our sample between 6300 and 2300 14C yr B.P. likely reflects increased aridity associated with the mid-Holocene Altithermal. The oldest black mats date to 11,800–11,600 14C yr B.P., and the peak in the 14C black mat distribution falls at ∼10,000 14C yr B.P. As the formation of black mats is spring related, their abundance reflects refilling of valley aquifers starting no later than 11,800 and peaking after 11,000 14C yr B.P. Reactivation of spring-fed channels shortly before 11,200 14C yr B.P. is also apparent in the stratigraphic records from the Las Vegas and Pahrump Valleys. This age distribution suggests that black mats and related spring-fed channels in part may have formed in response to Younger Dryas (YD)-age recharge in the region. However, the inception of black mat formation precedes that of the YD by at least 40014C yr, and hydrological change is gradual, not rapid.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
University of Washington

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

Benson, L., Burdett, J., Lund, S., Kashgarian, M., Mensing, S., 1997. Nearly synchronous climate change in the northern Hemisphere during the last glacial termination. Nature. 388 263265.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bequaert, J.C., Miller, W.B., 1973. The Mollusks of the Arid Southwest, with an Arizona Checklist. University of Arizona Press, Tucson. Google Scholar
Birks, H.H., Mathews, R., 1978. Studies in the vegetational history of Scotland. New Phytologist. 80 455484.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Björck, S., Kromer, B., Johnsen, S., Bennike, O., Hammerlund, D., Lemdahl, G., Possnert, G., Rasmussen, T., Wohlfarth, B., Hammer, C., Spurk, M., 1996. Synchronized terrestrial–atmospheric deglacial records around the North Atlantic. Science. 274 11551160.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Brackenridge, G.R., 1981. Terrestrial paleoenvironmental effects of a late Quaternary-age supernova. Icarus. 46 8193.Google Scholar
Burch, J.B., 1982. Freshwater Snails (Mollusca: Gastropoda) of North America: United States Environmental Protection Agency, Environmental Monitoring and Support Laboratory. Google Scholar
Chamberlin, R.V., Jones, D.T., 1929. A Descriptive Catalog of the Mollusca of Utah. Google Scholar
Clarke, A.H., 1981. The Freshwater Mollusks of Canada. National Museum of Natural Sciences, Ottawa. Google Scholar
Currey, D.R., 1990. Quaternary palaeolakes in the evolution of semidesert basins, with special emphasis on Lake Bonneville and the Great Basin, U.S.A. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, and Palaeoecology. 76 189214.Google Scholar
Deines, P., 1980. The isotopic composition of reduced organic carbon. Handbook of Environmental Geochemistry. Elsevier, Amsterdam, p. 329–406.Google Scholar
Denton, G.H., Hendy, C.H., 1994. Younger Dryas age advance of Franz Josef glacier in the southern Alps. Science. 264 14341437.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DuBarton, A.E., Spaulding, W.G., Kelly, M.S., Cleland, J.H., 1991. On Archeological and Paleoenvironmental Testing of Three Sites along the Eglington Escarpment. Dames and Moore Ltd, Las Vegas. Google Scholar
Forester, R.M., Smith, A.J., 1994. Late Glacial Climate Estimates for Southern Nevada the Ostracode Fossil Record. p. 2553–2561.Google Scholar
Frison, G.C., Stanford, D.J., 1982. The Agate Basin Site: A Record of the Paleoindian Occupation of the Northwestern High Plains.. Academic Press, New York. Google Scholar
Fry, B., Sherr, E.B., 1988. δ13 . Rundel, P.W., Elheringer, J.R., Nagy, K.A., Stable Isotopes in Ecological Research. Springer-Verlag, New York, 196229.Google Scholar
Haynes, C.V. Jr., 1967. Quaternary geology of the Tule Springs Area, Clark County, Nevada. Wormington, H.M., Ellis, D., Pleistocene Studies in Southern Nevada. Nevada State Museum of Anthropology Carson City 1128.Google Scholar
Haynes, C.V. Jr., 1968. Geochronology of late Quaternary alluvium. Morrison, R.B., Wright, H.E., Means of Correlation of Late Quaternary Successions. Univ. of Utah Press, Salt Lake City, 591631.Google Scholar
Haynes, C.V. Jr., 1984. Stratigraphy and late Pleistocene extinction in the United States. Martin, P.S., Klein, R.G., Quaternary Extinctions: A Quaternary Revolution. Univ. of Arizona Press, Tucson, 345353.Google Scholar
Haynes, C.V. Jr., 1985. Mastodon-bearing springs and Quaternary geochronology of the lower Pome de Terre Valley, Missouri. Geological Society of America Special Paper. 204.Google Scholar
Haynes, C.V. Jr., 1991. Geoarcheological and paleohydrological evidence for a Clovisage drought in North America and its bearing on extinction. Quaternary Research. 35 438450.Google Scholar
Henderson, J., 1924. Mollusca of Colorado, Utah, Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming. University of Colorado Studies. 13 65223.Google Scholar
Henderson, J., 1929. The non-marine mollusca of Oregon and Washington. University of Colorado Studies. 17 47180.Google Scholar
Henderson, J., 1936. The mollusca of Colorado, Utah, Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming—Supplement. University of Colorado Studies. 23 81145.Google Scholar
Henderson, J., 1936. The non-marine mollusca of Oregon and Washington—Supplement. University of Colorado Studies. 23 251280.Google Scholar
Hibbard, C.W., Taylor, D.W., 1960. Two late Pleistocene faunas from southwestern Kansas. Contributions to the Museum of Paleontology. 16 1233.Google Scholar
Holliday, V.T., 1985. Archeological geology of the Lubbock Lake site, southern high plains of Texas. Geological Society of America Bulletin. 96 14831492.Google Scholar
Holliday, V.T., 1995. Stratigraphy and paleoenvironments of late Quaternary valley fills on the southern High Plains. Geological Society of America Memoir. 186.Google Scholar
Hovingh, P., 1986. Biogeographic aspects of leeches, mollusks, and amphibians in the intermontane region. Great Basin Naturalist. 46 736744.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hubricht, L., 1985. The Distributions of Native Land Mollusks of the Eastern United States. Google Scholar
Mifflin, M.D., 1968. Delineation of Ground-Water Flow Systems in Nevada. Desert Research Institute, Reno. Google Scholar
Mifflin, M.D., Hess, J.W., 1979. Regional carbonate flow systems in Nevada. Journal of Hydrology. 43 217237.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Narvaez, C.de, 1995. Paleohydrology and Paleotopography of a Las Vegas Spring.. Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff. Google Scholar
Peterson, F.F., 1980. Holocene desert soil formation under sodium salt influence in a playa-margin environment. Quaternary Research. 13 172186.Google Scholar
Pratt, W. L, 1993, Intermontane Mollusca: An Annotated Checklist and Key to the Mollusks of the Great Basin and Adjacent Areas, Museum of Natural History. University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Google Scholar
Quade, J., 1986. Late Quaternary environmental changes in the upper Las Vegas Valley. Quaternary Research. 26 340357.Google Scholar
Quade, J., Pratt, W.L., 1989. Late Wisconsin groundwater discharge environments of the southwestern Indian Springs Valley, southern Nevada. Quaternary Research. 31 351370.Google Scholar
Quade, J., Mifflin, M.D., Pratt, W.L., McCoy, W., Burckle, L., 1995. Fossil spring deposits in the southern Great Basin and their implications for changes in water-table levels near Yucca Mountain, Nevada, during Quaternary time. Geological Society of America Bulletin. 107 213230.Google Scholar
Reider, R.G., 1990. Late Pleistocene and Holocene pedogenic and environmental trends at archeological sites in plains and mountain areas of Colorado and Wyoming. Lasca, P., Donahue, J., Archeological Geology of North America. 335360.Google Scholar
Safford, T., 1981. Alluvial geology and archeological potential of the Texas southern high plains. American Antiquity. 46 548565.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, B.N., 1982. General characteristics of terrestrial plants (agronomic and forests)—C3 4 . Mitsui, A., Black, C.C., CRC Handbook of Biosolar Resources. CRC Press, Boca Raton, 99118.Google Scholar
Winograd, I.J., Robertson, F.N., 1982. Deep oxygenated ground water: Anomaly or common occurrence. Science. 216 12271230.Google Scholar