Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-lnqnp Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T17:27:54.388Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Optically stimulated luminescence ages from the Lake Agassiz basin in Manitoba

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2018

James T. Teller*
Affiliation:
Department of Geological Sciences, University Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba R3T 4M4, Canada
Roderick A. McGinn
Affiliation:
Department of Geography, Brandon University, Brandon, Manitoba R7A 6A9, Canada
Haresh M. Rajapara
Affiliation:
Physical Research Laboratory, Ahmedabad 380 009, India Department of Physics, Electronics and Space Science, Gujarat University, Ahmedabad 380 009, India
Anil D. Shukla
Affiliation:
Physical Research Laboratory, Ahmedabad 380 009, India
Ashok K. Singhvi
Affiliation:
Physical Research Laboratory, Ahmedabad 380 009, India
*
*Corresponding author at: Department of Geological Sciences, University Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba R3T 4M4, Canada. E-mail address: [email protected] (J.T. Teller).

Abstract

Geomorphic analysis and optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) ages from undated Lake Agassiz beaches and adjacent fluvial sediments on Riding Mountain in Manitoba provide insight into their early history. New OSL ages of 14.5±2.4 and 13.4±0.7 ka on the oldest (Herman to Norcross) beaches of Lake Agassiz near the Canada-U.S. border indicate that the Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS) retreated from that part of the Agassiz basin by ~14.5 ka. To the north along Riding Mountain, the Herman strandlines are absent, and OSL ages on the oldest beach there average 12.9 ka, which links it to the younger Norcross-Tintah strandlines. In adjacent Riding Mountain, OSL ages and geomorphological relationships of a large abandoned glacial spillway >200 m above the oldest beaches of Lake Agassiz indicate that this channel predates retreat of the LIS and formation of beaches in this part of the Agassiz basin, with ice remaining in this area until after 14.5 ka. OSL ages on the Gimli beach 170 km to the east are >3000 yr older than conventional assignments, suggesting that it formed during the Moorhead low-water phase 12.8–10.6 ka. Luminescence ages support the conclusion that the Campbell beach formed ~10.9 ka near the end of the Moorhead low-water phase.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Washington. Published by Cambridge University Press, 2018 

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

Aitken, M.J., 1998. An Introduction to Optical Dating. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Bannatyne, B.B., 1970. The Clays and Shales of Manitoba. Publication 67-1. Department of Mines and Natural Resources, Mines Branch, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.Google Scholar
Barber, D., Dyke, A., Hillaire-Marcel, C., Jennings, A., Andrews, J., Kerwin, M., Bilodeau, G., McNeely, R., Southons, J., Morehead, M.D., Gagnoll, J.-M. 1999. Forcing the cold event of 8200 years ago by catastrophic drainage of Laurentide lakes. Nature 400, 344348.Google Scholar
Bertouille, C., 1986. Correlations and Lithological Study of Lake Agassiz Strandlines in Southern Manitoba. Bachelor’s thesis, Department Earth Sciences, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.Google Scholar
Bøtter-Jensen, L., Bulur, E., Duller, G.A.T., Murray, A.S., 2000. Advances in luminescence instrument systems. Radiation Measurements 32, 523528.Google Scholar
Breckenridge, A., 2015. The Tintah-Campbell gap and implications for glacial Lake Agassiz drainage during the Younger Dryas cold interval. Quaternary Science Reviews 117, 124134.Google Scholar
Broecker, W., Kennett, J., Flower, B., Teller, J., Trumbore, S., Bonani, G., Wolfli, W., 1989. Routing of meltwater from the Laurentide Ice Sheet during the Younger Dryas cold episode. Nature 341, 318321.Google Scholar
Burt, A.K., 2004a. Surficial Geology, Beausejour, Manitoba. Geological Survey of Canada Map 2053A, Manitoba Geological Survey, Geoscientific MAP 2003-5, scale 1:100,000. Geological Survey of Canada, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Burt, A.K., 2004b. Surficial Geology, Belair, Manitoba. Geological Survey of Canada Map 2050A, Manitoba Geological Survey, Geoscientific MAP 2003-2, scale 1:100,000. Geological Survey of Canada, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Burt, A.K., Brennand, T.A., Matile, G., Keller, G., Thorleifson, L.H., 2002. Reinterpretation of the Belair Moraine, southeastern Manitoba, Canada, based on a regional digital elevation model and new geological data. In: North-Central Section (36th) and Southeastern Section (51st), GSA Joint Annual Meeting (April 3–5, 2002), Lexington, Kentucky, Abstracts, 29–0.Google Scholar
Chauhan, N., Singhvi, A.K., 2011. Distribution in SAR palaeodoses due to spatial heterogeneity of natural beta dose. Geochronometria 38, 190198.Google Scholar
Clark, P.U., Marshall, S., Clarke, G., Hostetler, S., Licciardi, J., Teller, J., 2001. Freshwater forcing of abrupt climate change during the last glaciation. Science 293, 283287.Google Scholar
Condron, A., Windsor, P., 2012. Meltwater routing and the Younger Dryas. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 109, 1992819933.Google Scholar
Dyke, A., Prest, V., 1987. Late Wisconsinan and Holocene history of the Laurentide Ice Sheet. Geographie physique et Quaternaire 41, 237263.Google Scholar
Elson, J.A., 1967. Geology of glacial Lake Agassiz. In: Mayer-Oakes, W.J. (Ed.), Life, Land, and Water: Proceedings of the 1966 Conference on Environmental Studies of the Glacial Lake Agassiz Region. University of Manitoba Press, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, pp. 37–95.Google Scholar
Fenton, M.M., Moran, S.R., Teller, J.T., Clayton, L., 1983. Quaternary stratigraphy and history in the southern part of the Lake Agassiz basin. In Teller, J.T., Clayton, L. (Eds.), Glacial Lake Agassiz. Geological Association of Canada Special Paper 26, Geological Association of Canada, St. John’s, Newfoundland, Canada, pp. 4974.Google Scholar
Fisher, T.G., 2005. Strandline analysis in the southern basin of glacial Lake Agassiz, Minnesota and North and South Dakota, USA. Geological Society America Bulletin 117, 14811496.Google Scholar
Fisher, T.G., 2007. Abandonment chronology of glacial Lake Agassiz’s northwestern outlet. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 246, 3144.Google Scholar
Fisher, T.C., Yansa, C., Lowell, T., Lepper, K., Hajdas, I., Ashworth, A., 2008. The chronology, climate, and confusion of the Moorhead Phase in the glacial Lake Agassiz basin. Quaternary Science Reviews 27, 11241135.Google Scholar
Fullerton, D., Ringrose, S., Clayton, L., Schreiner, B., Goebel, J., 2000. Quaternary Geologic Map of the Winnipeg 4° x 6° Quadrangle, United States and Canada. U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Investigations Series Map I-1420 (NM-14). U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, Virginia.Google Scholar
Grant, N., Burt, A.K., 2004. Surficial Geology, Inwood, Manitoba. Geological Survey of Canada Map 2049A, Manitoba Geological Survey, Geoscientific MAP 2003-1, scale 1:100,000. Geological Survey of Canada, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Grimm, E., Donovan, J., Brown, K., 2011. A high-resolution record of climate variability and landscape response from Kettle Lake, northern Great Plains, North America. Quaternary Science Reviews 30, 26262650.Google Scholar
Johnston, W.A., 1931. Winnipeg Map Sheet, Surface Deposits. Geological Survey of Canada Map 254A, scale 1:506,880. Geological Survey of Canada, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Johnston, W.A., 1946. Glacial Lake Agassiz, with Special Reference to the Mode of Deformation of the Beaches. Geological Survey of Canada Bulletin 7. E. Cloutier, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Klassen, R.W., 1966. The Surficial Geology of the Riding Mountain Area, Manitoba–Saskatchewan. PhD dissertation, Department of Geology, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada.Google Scholar
Klassen, R.W., 1975. Quaternary Geology and Geomorphology of Assiniboine and Qu’Appelle Valleys of Manitoba and Saskatchewan. Geological Survey of Canada Bulletin 228.Google Scholar
Klassen, R.W., 1979. Pleistocene Geology and Geomorphology of the Riding Mountain and Duck Mountain Areas, Manitoba-Saskatchewan. Geological Survey of Canada Memoir 396. Geological Survey of Canada, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Klassen, R.W., 1989. Quaternary geology of the southern Canadian Interior Plains. In Fulton, R.J. (Ed.), Quaternary Geology of Canada and Greenland. Geology of Canada, No. 1. Geological Survey of Canada, Ottawa, pp. 138173.Google Scholar
Laird, K.R., Fritz, S., Grimm, E., Mueller, P., 1996. Century-scale paleoclimatic reconstructions from Moon Lake, a closed basin lake in the Northern Great Plains. Limnology and Oceanography 41, 890902.Google Scholar
Last, W.M., Teller, J.T., 2004. Paleolimnology of Lake Manitoba, Canada: the lithostratigraphic evidence. Geographie physique et Quaternaire 56, 135154.Google Scholar
Lepper, K., Buell, A., Fisher, T., Lowell, T., 2013. A chronology for glacial Lake Agassiz shorelines along Upham’s namesake transect. Quaternary Research 80, 8898.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lepper, K., Gorz, K., Fisher, T., Lowell, T., 2011. Age determination for glacial Lake Agassiz shorelines west of Fargo, North Dakota, USA. Canadian Journal Earth Sciences 48, 11991207.Google Scholar
Lepper, K., Mckeever, S.W.S., 2002. An objective methodology for dose distribution analysis. Radiation Protection Dosimetry 101, 349352.Google Scholar
Leverett, F., 1932. Quaternary Geology of Minnesota and Parts of Adjacent States. U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 161. U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Liu, X., Fisher, T., Lepper, K., Lowell, T., 2014. Geochemical characteristics of glacial Lake Agassiz sediments and new ages for the Moorhead Phase at Fargo, North Dakota, USA. Canadian Journal Earth Sciences 51, 850861.Google Scholar
McGinn, R.A., 1991. The formation and draining of late Wisconsinan superglacial lakes on the Riding Mountain Uplands, Manitoba. Atlantic Geology 27, 221227.Google Scholar
McGinn, R.A., 1997. The Horod Moraine: the facies and deposits of a supra-terminoglacial subenvironment. In Thraves, B.D. (Ed.), The Estevan Papers. Regina Geographical Studies, No. 6. Department of Geography, University of Regina, Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada, pp. 100112.Google Scholar
McGinn, R.A., 2000. Ice-shoved hills and related glaciotectonic features in the Glacial Lake Proven basin, Riding Mountain Uplands, Manitoba. Prairie Perspectives: Geographical Essays 3, 8496.Google Scholar
McGinn, R.A., 2002. A sedimentary sequence in the Glacial Lake Proven basin: the Rolling River section, Riding Mountain, Manitoba. Prairie Perspectives: Geographical Essays 5, 109124.Google Scholar
McGinn, R.A., Wiseman, D.J., Zaniewski, K., 2009. Terminoglacial lacustrine sediments and other deposits in the Glacial Lake Proven basin, Riding Mountain, Manitoba. Prairie Perspectives: Geographical Essays 12, 6378.Google Scholar
McGinn, R.A., Zaniewski, K., 2004. Outburst flood in the Upper Rolling River spillway, Riding Mountain Uplands, Manitoba: a physiographic and sedimentological appraisal. Prairie Perspectives: Geographical Essays 6, 179183.Google Scholar
McGinn, R.A., Zaniewski, K., Wiseman, D.J., 2007. The extent and characteristics of glaciolacustrine and other deposits in the Otter Lake basin, Riding Mountain, Manitoba. Prairie Perspectives: Geographical Essays 10, 173190.Google Scholar
McMillan, K., 2006. Mapping and Characterization of the Upper Lake Agassiz Beaches along the Manitoba Escarpment between the International Border and the Assiniboine River. Master’s thesis, Department of Geological Sciences, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.Google Scholar
McMillan, K., Teller, J.T., 2012. Origin of the Herman–Norcross–Tintah sequence of Lake Agassiz beaches in Manitoba, Canada. Geomorphology 151–152, 7788.Google Scholar
Mihychuk, M., Groom, H., 1979. Quaternary Geology and Aggregate Resources of the Neepawa Area. Manitoba Mineral Resources Division, Report of Field Activities, Map PN-2, 1:50,000. Manitoba Mineral Resources Division, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.Google Scholar
Murray, A.S., Wintle, A.G., 2000. Luminescence dating of quartz using an improved single-aliquot regenerative-dose protocol. Radiation Measurements 32, 5773.Google Scholar
Porat, N., 2006. Use of magnetic separation for purifying quartz for luminescence dating. Ancient TL 24, 3336.Google Scholar
Rampino, M., Sanders, J., 1980. Holocene transgression in south-central Long Island, New York. Journal Sedimentary Petrology 50, 10631080.Google Scholar
Sun, C.S., Teller, J.T., 1997. Reconstruction of glacial Lake Hind in southwestern Manitoba, Canada. Journal of Paleolimnology 17, 921.Google Scholar
Teller, J.T., 1989. Importance of the Rossendale site in establishing a deglacial chronology along the southwestern margin of the Laurentide Ice Sheet. Quaternary Research 32, 1223.Google Scholar
Teller, J.T., 2013. Lake Agassiz during the Younger Dryas. Quaternary Research 80, 361369.Google Scholar
Teller, J.T., Last, W., 1981. Late Quaternary history of Lake Manitoba, Canada. Quaternary Research 16, 97116.Google Scholar
Teller, J.T., LeCompte, M., Kennett, J., Telka, A., Diaz, A., Boyd, M., West, A., Garcia, R., Batchelor, D., Mooney, C., 2015. A Younger Dryas sequence in the glacial Lake Hind basin of Manitoba, Canada. In: XIX International Quaternary Association (INQUA) Congress, Nagoya, Japan, Abstract T00985 (G01-07).Google Scholar
Teller, J.T., Leverington, D.W., 2004. Glacial Lake Agassiz: a 5000-year history of change and its relationship to the δ18O record of Greenland. Geological Society of America Bulletin 116, 729742.Google Scholar
Teller, J.T., Risberg, J., Matile, G., Zoltai, S., 2000. Postglacial history and paleoecology of Wampum, Manitoba, a former lagoon in the Lake Agassiz basin. Geological Society of America Bulletin 112, 943958.Google Scholar
Teller, J.T., Rühland, K.M., Smol, J.P., Mellors, T.J., Paterson, A.M., 2018. Holocene history of Lake of the Woods: Ontario, Manitoba, and Minnesota. Geological Society of America Bulletin 130, 323.Google Scholar
Teller, J.T., Thorleifson, L.H., 1983. The Lake Agassiz–Lake Superior connection. In: Teller, J.T., Clayton, L. (Eds.), Glacial Lake Agassiz. Geological Association of Canada, Special Paper 26 Geological Association of Canada, St. John’s, Newfoundland, Canada, pp. 261290.Google Scholar
Teller, J.T., Thorleifson, L.H., Dredge, L.A., Hobbs, H.C., Schreiner, B.T., 1983. Maximum extent and major features of Lake Agassiz. In Teller, J.T, Clayton, L. (Eds.), Glacial Lake Agassiz. Geological Association of Canada, Special Paper 26, with map, scale 1:3,000,000 Geological Association of Canada, St. John’s, Newfoundland, Canada, pp. 4345.Google Scholar
Teller, J.T., Yang, Z., 2015. Mapping and measuring Lake Agassiz strandlines in North Dakota and Manitoba using LiDAR DEM data: comparing techniques, revising correlations, and interpreting anomalous isostatic rebound gradients. Geological Society of America Bulletin 127, 608620.Google Scholar
Upham, W., 1890. Report of Exploration of the Glacial Lake Agassiz in Manitoba. Geological and Natural History Survey of Canada, Part E, Annual Report for 1888–1889, Vol. 4. W.F. Brown, Montreal.Google Scholar
Upham, W., 1895. The Glacial Lake Agassiz. U.S. Geological Survey Monograph 25. U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Wolfe, B., Teller, J., 1995. Sedimentation in ice-dammed glacial Lake Assiniboine, Saskatchewan, and catastrophic drainage down the Assiniboine Valley. Geographie physique et Quaternaire 49, 251263.Google Scholar
Yang, Z., Teller, J.T., 2012. Using LiDAR digital elevation model data to map Lake Agassiz beaches, measure their isostatically induced slopes, and estimate their ages. Quaternary International 260, 3242.Google Scholar
Supplementary material: File

Teller et al. supplementary material

Teller et al. supplementary material 1

Download Teller et al. supplementary material(File)
File 34.2 KB
Supplementary material: File

Teller et al. supplementary material

Figure S1

Download Teller et al. supplementary material(File)
File 1.5 MB
Supplementary material: File

Teller et al. supplementary material

Table S1

Download Teller et al. supplementary material(File)
File 35.4 KB