Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rdxmf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T06:34:46.691Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A SUMMARY OF RADIOCARBON MEASUREMENTS OF FLUVIAL AND COLLUVIAL DEPOSITS IN CATCHMENTS OF SOUTH-CENTRAL ONTARIO, CANADA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 February 2024

William C Mahaney*
Affiliation:
York University, Department of Geography, 4700 Keele St., N. York, Ontario, Canada, M3J 1P3 and Quaternary Surveys, 26 Thornhill Ave., Thornhill, Ontario, Canada, L4J 1J4
Andrew M Stewart
Affiliation:
Strata Consulting Inc., 528 Bathurst St, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
*
*Corresponding author. Email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Fluvial and colluvial deposits of Late Holocene age in South-Central Ontario catchments have provided few 14C dates, most by conventional methods registering century-old ages. Other young deposits, dated by conventional and accelerator mass spectrometry radiocarbon (AMS 14C), have yielded bomb-affected post-1950 ages over variable time limits. Attempts to date the base of Ah and lower-in-section soil horizons, in Early to Late Holocene stream terrace deposits, have yielded atomic bomb effects. Comparing bomb contamination in Late Holocene fluvial deposits, using both conventional and AMS methods, identifies a mix of bomb-affected beds juxtaposed with dated beds, the latter yielding ages with narrow standard deviations. Colluvial deposits overlying key glacial sections in the Rouge Catchment, while rare, yield bracketed AMS ages for an Ahbk horizon that refines weathering times relative to previously obtained conventional 14C dates. Bomb-affected sediment appears variably distributed within floodplain soils and in the ground soil of a colluvial section. Mass wasted deposits, with AMS 14C ages spread over the last few centuries, appear related to Little Ice Age (LIA) changes in climate, corroborated by pollen records. Further, these AMS-14C dated beds calibrate weathering of secondary Fe-Al oxihydroxides over the first half a millennium of weathering time.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of University of Arizona

INTRODUCTION

Previous work on Late Holocene fluvial terraces and colluvial deposits in the Rouge catchments (Rouge River and Little Rouge Creek) in southern Ontario (Figures 1A, 1B) have, from the outset, focused on lithostratigraphy (Karrow Reference Karrow1967; Mahaney et al. Reference Mahaney, Hancock, Milan, Pulleyblank, Costa and Milner2014), weathering and soil morphogenesis (Mahaney and Sanmugadas Reference Mahaney and Sanmugadas1986; Mahaney and Terasmae Reference Mahaney and Terasmae1988; Mahaney and Hancock Reference Mahaney and Hancock1993a). Later, the focus shifted to landforms and water quantity (Weninger and McAndrews Reference Weninger and McAndrews1989; TRCA 2007a, 2007b). Occasionally, terrace and slope soil stratigraphy benefitted from relative dating (RD) methods using soluble Fe and Al phases, with these estimates partly built upon radiocarbon-age controls and plant-soil interactions (Mahaney et al. Reference Mahaney, Hancock, Somelar and Milan2016). However, Fe and Al extraction databases used to elucidate paleoenvironmental reconstructions from fluvial, beach (Sauer et al. Reference Sauer, Schülli-Maurer, Sperstad, Sorensen and Stahr2008) and lacustrine deposits (Mahaney et al. Reference Mahaney, Milner, Russell, Kalm, Bezada, Hancock and Beukens2001), and some of the uncertainty as to the exact composition of particular extractions has been previously discussed by Mahaney et al. (Reference Mahaney, Hancock, Somelar and Milan2016). What is crucial with RD methods applied to young soil weathering is the start-up ages assigned to minute concentrations of Fe and Al oxihydroxides, where age changes are at the level of 0.01 percent, and changes occur over a few centuries. Conventional 14C and AMS 14C measurements are compared to start-up ages of the weathering process, similar to earlier approaches (Lichter Reference Lichter1998; Ewing and Nater Reference Ewing and Nater2002).

Figure 1 (A) Surface geology and location of sampling sites in the Rouge River/Little Rouge Creek and West Duffins Creek catchments; (B) a more detailed view of Rouge/Little Rouge sites with topography shown by one-meter contours. Topographic controls taken from Sharpe et al. (Reference Sharpe, Barnett, Russell, Brennand and Gorrell1999).

Several papers have focused on the dating of fluvial terraces (Phillips et al. Reference Phillips, McDonald, Reneau and Poths1998; Guzmán et al. Reference Guzmán, Vassallo, Audemard, Mugnier, Oropeza, Yepez, Carcaillet, Alvarado and Carrillo2013) and moraines (Zreda and Shanahan Reference Zreda and Shanahan2000; Carcaillet et al. Reference Carcaillet, Angel, Carrilo and Beck2013), using OSL and cosmogenic dating methods such as 10Be, 21Ne, and 36Cl. These types of studies have not been applied to the Holocene geochronology of Southern Ontario. OSL dating has not proved practical in central Southern Ontario catchments because of zeroing problems and high concentrations of carbonate (Galina Hůtt, personal communication 1992). However, OSL has been used (Lovis et al. Reference Lovis, Arbogast and Monaghan2012) to date nearby Lake Michigan sand dunes with reasonable results. With the quartz-diminished sediment in moraine, terrace and floodplain sediment, cosmogenic dating has not been applied to unraveling the Holocene geochronology of Southern Ontario. While moraines with interstadial sediments have occasionally yielded minor organics for 14C dating (Karrow Reference Karrow1967), post-Lake Iroquois sediment terrace/floodplain sequences have had to rely on relative-age dating (RD) by fluvial terrace soil stratigraphy, Fe-Al extractions (Mahaney et al. Reference Mahaney, Hancock, Milan, Pulleyblank, Costa and Milner2014) and young, near modern, conventional 14C ages of Ahb horizons in both floodplain and colluvial deposits.

For these young deposits, initial weathering trends, slope instability and time of overbank sedimentation can be tentatively tied to inferred changes of climate, such as the LIA or simply decadal changes in weather/stream discharge flooding. Recent climate change is sometimes inferred from pollen records (McAndrews Reference McAndrews1981; McAndrews and Boyko-Diakonow Reference McAndrews, Boyko-Diakonow and Fulton1989), and dates in terrace and colluvial sections alone, rather than from compositional studies of sections resulting in an incomplete understanding of the paleoenvironment. Moreover, sedimentary investigations in the Rouge and West Duffins catchments (Figure 1A), as in other drainages, suffer from a lack of organic materials suitable for radiocarbon dating. This makes Fe and Al extracts of prime importance in the attempt to unravel leaching histories and paleoenvironmental reconstructions. Here, we compare previous conventional 14C and recent AMS dating of floodplain and colluvial sections to refine age control of the first few centuries of sediment weathering and startup of Fe-Al extraction estimates. Here, we report on new AMS 14C measurements intended to address this question and remaining bomb carbon-14 concentrations that produce post-1950 ages.

REGIONAL GEOLOGY AND STUDY AREA

Surface runoff in the Rouge and West Duffins basins (Figures 1 A, B) of central Southern Ontario drains across thick till/lacustrine/deltaic-encrusted sediment draped over Ordovician shales of the Whitby Formation (Liberty Reference Liberty1955, Reference Liberty1964). Within both catchments, bedrock outcrops are rare, found only in the R46 section (stratigraphy in Mahaney Reference Mahaney2015, and in Mahaney and Hancock Reference Mahaney and Hancock1993a; site location on Figure 1B), in a prominent outcrop near Twyn Rivers Drive on Little Rouge Creek, located three km north of Lake Ontario, and 1 km north of the confluence with Rouge River. All surface till/lacustrine sections date from the Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS) and all soil materials are sourced from these sediments.

Climatic data for the area highlights a mean annual temperature (MAT) of ∼7ºC, with extremes of –34ºC and 40ºC. A mean annual precipitation (MAP) of 860 mm, coupled with a mean annual actual evapotranspiration (AE) of 530 mm (Brown et al. Reference Brown, McKay and Chapman1968; Phillips and McCulloch Reference Phillips and McCulloch1972), yields a mean annual water surplus of 330 mm. Even with soil moisture reserves shrinking there is available soil moisture for leaching. Throughput of soil moisture over the 11-kyr post-Lake Iroquois time-period may only be estimated from solution of calcite in soil epipedons, with secondary precipitation of carbonate in Ck horizons known to increase with time (Mahaney et al. Reference Mahaney, Hancock, Somelar and Milan2016). Thus, the thickness of secondary carbonate in Ck horizons increases with age of the pedon. Exceptions to this occur in profiles in landslide debris, discussed by Mahaney (Reference Mahaney2015), where wetting depth is reduced to a few centimeters, in response to the presence of a unique hydrophilic fern (Adiantum pedantum) that produces a unique soil bioclimate greatly reducing the throughput of soil water. Slow leaching increases the ratio of Si:Al to 2:1, and coupled with plentiful Ca, thereby initiates genesis of Ca-smectite, confirmed by XRD. Thus, overall the region produces a soil leaching environment that is capable of moving bomb contaminants and selective Fe/Al extracts in micropores usually associated with root channels, at present and in the past. Of all extracts (pyrophosphate Fe-Al, acid ammonium oxalate Fe-Al, and Na-dithionite Fe-Al, Parfitt and Childs Reference Parfitt and Childs1988), only Feo (using acid ammonium oxalate) is of concern, as it is partly soluble, so any concentration reported will be minimal. Such leaching effects do not appear to affect radiocarbon dating results, as both methods produce ages with narrow standard deviations of decadal plus or minus range. Of all other oxihydroxides, Fep, Fed, and Ald offer the best prospects for RD age control, as discussed later in the paper.

Later meteorological data, released by the Ontario Ministry of the Environment (1984), covers a broad area bordering the north shore of Lake Ontario, providing mean figures, as follows: mean annual precipitation (MAP)—900 mm; mean actual evaporation (AE)—550 mm; with runoff ∼250–300 mm, and snowfall ∼100–150 mm. In less than two decades the MAP increased 40 mm, AE 20 mm. Considering these values as approximate, and coupled with slightly elevated MAP and AE relative to previously recorded climatic data noted above, such increases of MAP and AE possibly reflect either increased urban warming or global warming. Despite a declining mean water surplus soil water remains sufficient to maintain soils at or beyond field capacity most of the year. Soils in these sections, with fine sandy to silt loam textures, normally yield about ∼5% water content (unpublished data from 78 soil profiles studied in both Rouge catchments). Still more recent MAT for the 20-yr period 1999–2019 is MAT at 8.6ºC with MAP at 1020 mm for Pickering, Ontario which is on the east boundary of the Rouge River (see-https://en.climate-data.org/north-america/canada/ontario/pickering-4854/#temperature-graph), highlight continuing increases.

Over the fifty-year period from the 1970s to the present, MAT has risen 1.6ºC, which is close to the 1.3ºC rise in worldwide temperature over nearly the same period documented by the Paris Agreement—(IPCC 2021). Along with this rise in MAT, MAP is seen to rise by 120 mm/yr.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Soil descriptions mainly follow guidelines established by the NSSC (1995), Soil Survey Staff (1975), and Birkeland (Reference Birkeland1999). The Ck horizon designation (k=carbonate) originates from the U.S. Soil Taxonomy. Minor departures include the Cu horizon (unweathered parent material) from Hodgson (Reference Hodgson1976) and the “h” identifier of the A horizon (h= humus), which follows the CSSC (1998) and is used when color is darker than 10YR 3/1. B horizons, when carrying the “w,” replace the former color B group (Soil Survey Staff 1975; NSSC 1995). In the Canadian soil classification weathered B horizons are designated “m” for modified. Soil color assessment based on Oyama and Takehara’s (Reference Oyama and Takehara1970) soil color chips, essentially the same as the Munsell System (Macbeth 1992). Site selection was based on previous stratigraphic assessment (Mahaney and Sanmugadas Reference Mahaney and Sanmugadas1986; Mahaney and Hancock Reference Mahaney and Hancock1993b; Mahaney et al. Reference Mahaney, Hancock, Somelar and Milan2016), and on new sites intended to put an RD age fix on common 3 m terraces (R71). RD terrace age in both the Rouge and West Duffins Creek catchments is determined by terrace height above stream flow, using the amended relationship of Bufe et al. (Reference Bufe, Burbank, Liu, Bookhagen, Qin, Chen, Li, Thompson and Yang2017) where time of incision (Delta ti) = depth of incision (Di)/incision rate (Evi). Time of incision = 11 ka, average depth of incision = 35 m/incision rate average = 318 cm/1 kyr. While this approximates an RD age of 1ka for the 3 m terrace (R71), age estimates of older surfaces become complicated by early release of permafrost, declining catchment area, variable discharge with lowering of Lake Iroquois, and changes of climate with a hemlock infestation changing surface runoff as outlined by Mc Andrews (Reference McAndrews1981), McAndrews et al. (Reference McAndrews, Boyko-Diakonow and Fulton1989), and Mahaney et al. (Reference Mahaney, Hancock, Somelar and Milan2016). In addition, there is no way without 14C datable strata in terrace sections to account for Evb (beveling time; Bufe et al. Reference Bufe, Burbank, Liu, Bookhagen, Qin, Chen, Li, Thompson and Yang2017) following Evi (incision) to adjust height above stream flow. The best available estimate of age is height of terrace above stream flow.

Approximately 500 g samples were collected from horizons at each site to allow for particle size, clay mineral, soil chemistry and geochemical analyses. The samples were air dried, pretreated for particle size analysis where necessary, and treated with 30% H2O2 to partially remove organic contaminants. Also, when necessary, samples were later wet sieved to separate sand fractions, the <63 μm fraction (silt plus clay) subjected to particle size analysis by hydrometer (Day Reference Day and Black1965). RD Fe-Al extraction methods are outlined and described in Dormaar and Lutwick (Reference Dormaar and Lutwick1983), Parfitt and Childs (Reference Parfitt and Childs1988), and Mahaney et al. (Reference Mahaney, Hancock, Somelar and Milan2016).

For 14C dating, soil samples were air dried, subsamples intended for lab analysis were treated similarly for both conventional and AMS dating. All samples had macroscopic foreign material/roots removed under 10× magnification, followed by acid leaching to remove carbonates, and lastly washed with distilled water. Given the young age of all samples, NaOH treatment was considered not necessary and acid-cleaned dried soil organic matter (SOM) was submitted for 14C dating by first conventional, and later, AMS 14C methods. Conventional 14C was carried out at the Brock University Radiocarbon Laboratory operated by Howard Melville from 1970 until its decommissioning in 2008. AMS 14C for sample analysis reported here comes from the Chrono 14 laboratory at Queens University Belfast, Belfast, U.K. AMS 14C ages reported here as fraction modern corrected using 13C measured using AMS 13C, following Stuiver and Polach (Reference Stuiver and Polach1977).

Atomic bomb-contaminated samples producing post-1950 AMS 14C ages were analyzed using the Levin Int. Cal curves from the OxCal 4.1.1 system and the bomb curves at QUB in Northern Ireland—CALIBomb. Hence, the concentrations of post-1950 AMS 14C relevant in this case are measured at the start-up time of atomic testing (1950), and a return to near-zero contamination at some future indeterminate time up to 2020. The IntCal and QUB bomb curves post-1950 bomb contamination ages in the mid curve sections of Figures 4B and 5B were derived from atmospheric and tree ring tests only (in Austria and Germany), with no peat/soil sampling.

CALIBomb recent changes summarize several ways of reporting 14C activity levels relative to a standard now in use, but no convention has been established for reporting nuclear weapons testing (post-bomb) 14C levels in samples. The use of fraction modern (Fm) has been replaced with a new symbol—F14C—to prevent confusion since some previous samples may or may not have been fractionation corrected (Reimer et al. Reference Reimer, Brown and Reimer2004, Reference Reimer, Austin, Bard, Bayliss, Blackwell, Ramsey, Butzin, Cheng, Edwards and Friedrich2020; Calib.org.) (personal correspondence, AJT Jull 2023). F14C registers 1.0 (1950), with values <1.0 pre-1950; >1.0 post-bomb dates.

RESULTS

R13 Floodplain Section

The floodplain in the Rouge Valley (including both the Rouge River and Little Rouge Creek drainages; Figures 1A, B) has been subjected to mass wasting (earth slips), and deposition of dislodged trees along the waterways, as shown in Figure 2. Such bank erosion, compounded by ice blockage in spring and overbank flooding occasionally in summer, cover a large extent of the floodplain, producing a network of alluvial channels, in which aborted soil profile development is revealed by successions of Ahk/Cuk/Ahb/Coxbk/Cubk horizons in meter-deep profiles. These are survivors of short (decadal to-century-long) weathering events. As indicated in Figure 3, such soil successions in sandy-silty sediment often show slight increases of clay with depth, but with detrital, not pedogenic patterns only. Conventional 14C dating, prior to AMS 14C coming on stream, provided evidence for soil development over decades (less than a century), documenting recent stages of abortive soil development (i.e. Ahbk horizons) caused by episodic ice blockage flooding. These thin, young soils, with occasional slight clay increases with depth, show no pedogenic downward movement as supported by field test or mean phi calculations. Further XRD analyses of the clay fraction, previously indicated by Mahaney et al. (Reference Mahaney, Hancock, Somelar and Milan2016), show only detrital patterns of primary and secondary minerals, with calcite showing minor dissolution in Ah relative to Cubk horizons, where it increases. Overbank flooding is illustrated by increased calcite in the Ahk surface soil horizon in R13. Soil chemistry, down-section in R13, yields minor fluctuations of pH, conductivity, organic carbon, nitrogen, total Ca and Fe that represent abortive soil development over, at most, a century duration. Very slight adjustments of pH are fine tuned to organic carbon/N and conductivity that highlight initial soil development disrupted by recurring overbank sedimentation.

Figure 2 Rouge Floodplain at Site R13A about ∼400 m from site R13. For the location of R13, sampled in 1974, see Figure 1B.

Figure 3 The R13 profile with conventional-derived 14C dates and particle size (clay=solid line; silt=dashed line-silt+clay-100=sand). OC=organic carbon; Ca=total Ca; Fe=total Fe.

Figure 4 (A) R13A profile with convoluted horizons relative to R13 and new AMS 14C ages. Positive AMS 14C ages for samples (1) and (3) show median probability little different than raw conventional ages.

Figure 4 (B) calculation of the post-1950 ages using bomb-14C calibration curves of Hua et al. (Reference Hua, Barbetti and Rakowski2013) for samples (2) and (4) in Figure 4A.

Figure 5 (A) Sections R71 (Late Holocene) and R15 (Early Holocene) in the Rouge/Little Rouge catchment. Arrows indicate sample locations; (B) calculation of the post-1950 ages using bomb-14C calibration curves of Hua et al. (2022) for sections R71 and R15 in Figure 5A.

R13A Floodplain Section

Recent excavation of R13A (Figure 4A), at the same relative elevation (2 m) above the river (Figure 1B) and position as R13 (Figure 3), reveals a similar succession of overbank sediment (Cuk), atop a buried group of Ahbk/Cubk horizons extending down to stream level with a fully formed Entisol/Regosol (Ahbk/Cbk) in place. The surface Cu horizon shows no evidence of weathering and little incursion of root growth, suggesting a decade-long (or less) age. Despite the up to 1-m depth in the two profiles—R13 and R13A—close correlation of horizons is not possible given random floodplain erosional events at the two sites. However, stacking of multiple sequences of Ah horizons, separating thin flood deposits (Cu horizons) in both profiles, overlie a common, lower, better-developed buried soil with an Ah(k)/Cbk/Cuk profile. Similar to this approximation of the two closely spaced sections, the mineralogy and chemistry in R13A is a close copy to R13.

AMS 14C measurements gave ages to within a range of several centuries, which is consistent with the release of secondary Fe-Al oxides and hydroxides reported by Mahaney et al. (Reference Mahaney, Hancock, Somelar and Milan2016). We expect most of the age discrepancy between conventional and AMS dates are due to the different sample sizes, for AMS, smaller samples are used and the conventional ages were just “bulk dates”. However, modern samples showing bomb 14C effects (samples 2 and 4, Figure 4A) are located close to samples (1 and 3) with positive dates, the latter with narrow standard deviations (±29–32 yr). This proximity (to within ∼5 cm) of contaminated and uncontaminated samples suggests an almost random chance that young Ahb horizons may deliver AMS 14C ages which contain bomb 14C in some cases, but not others. This suggests a better strategy would be a detailed separation of different organic components of the soil horizons, perhaps by stepped combustion (McGeehin et al. Reference McGeehin2001).

Two samples, numbered 2 and 4 in section R13A, yielded post-bomb results at 70 cm and 50 cm depths, respectively. However, sample 3 in the section, unaffected by bomb effects, dates to 312 ± 32 yr BP (calibrated to 301–464 cal yr BP) and is within the upper buried Ahb horizon complex of an older but immature soil, complete with convoluted micro beds that appear disturbed by interconnected thin lenses of overbank sediment from minor incursions of flooding in recent times. The lower uncontaminated sample (1) is within the lowest Ahbk horizon complex, part of which dates to 588 ± 29 yr BP (calibrated to 537–647 cal yr BP). The difference between raw and calibrated ages for samples 1 and 3, varies between a decade for sample 1 and a century for sample 3. We take the older dates as representative of the age of the deposits, where no bomb 14C is evident.

R15 and R71 Terrace Sections

Surface Ah horizons at a high (14–15 m) terrace (R15) and a low (3–4 m) terrace site, (R71) (Figure 1B for location), respectively, were selected to test levels of bomb contamination in the bottom 1-cm of each surface soil horizon (Figure 5A). The Ah horizon in R15 on the older high terrace (<11 ka) (Mahaney and Sanmugadas Reference Mahaney and Sanmugadas1986; Mahaney et al. Reference Mahaney, Hancock, Somelar and Milan2016) is ∼15 cm thick, similar to the Ah horizon in R71 (not previously published) on the younger 3-m terrace (∼1.0 ka). Both sites, previously dated by RD methods (R15 in Mahaney et al. Reference Mahaney, Hancock, Somelar and Milan2016 and R71), show close agreement in Ah horizon thickness. This suggests that both surface horizons, despite their disparate ages, reach near maturity in a matter of a few centuries, at least with a steady-state input-output of organic carbon and nitrogen achieved. Previous work attests to the ∼1.0–1.5 kyr value of organic matter in local Ah horizons to reach equilibrium where input equals output (Mahaney and Sanmugadas Reference Mahaney and Sanmugadas1986; Mahaney et al. Reference Mahaney, Hancock, Somelar and Milan2016). However, both the basal Ah horizons R15 and R71 (see Table 1) show post-bomb radiocarbon dates.

Table 1 Details of conventional and AMS radiocarbon ages in Late Holocene soils of the Rouge Catchment, South Central Ontario

Notes: Finite ages (R13, R13A horizons 1 and 3, R47-Ahb, R47B and WD5) were calculated using Oxcal and the IntCal20 calibration curve (Reimer et al. Reference Reimer, Austin, Bard, Bayliss, Blackwell, Ramsey, Butzin, Cheng, Edwards and Friedrich2020; Bronk Ramsey et al. Reference Bronk Ramsey, Adolphi and Austin2023); post-bomb values were calculated using Calib.org/CALIBomb (Reimer and Reimer Reference Reimer and Reimer2024 CALIBomb [WWW program] at http://calib.org accessed 2023-05-03). For post-bomb values, the calibration results for 1σ and 2σ were the same for the values given.

a Value reported by the laboratory.

1 Value quoted in original date report.

2 Estimated from Calib.org/CALIBomb, error based on similar measurements by BGS.

R47 Colluvial Succession

The R47 and R47A successions (Figures 68) are pedostratigraphic complexes, which comprise a paleosol and ground soil formed in fine pebbly colluvium in the upper part of the R47 section in the Little Rouge Creek catchment (Figure 1B). The paleosols in R47 and R47A (from about 30-cm depth and below), overtopped with colluvium in which a thin ground soil formed, is variably dated by both conventional and AMS 14C. Previous (1990) dating of the mid-section of the 2Ahbk horizon in the R47 paleosol yielded an uncalibrated 14C age of 200 ± 80 (BGS-1230); (Mahaney and Hancock Reference Mahaney and Hancock1993b) age (Figure 6). A later resampling (2020) of the R47A profile by AMS 14C (see below, Figures 7 and 8) yielded uncalibrated ages of 304 ± 28 BP for the upper ∼2cm and 413 ± 27 yr BP for the lower ∼2 cm of the buried 2Ahbk horizon. Calibrated ages for these two horizon positions yield ages of 295–415 cal yr BP (upper) and 331–517 cal yr BP (lower). The mid-section (5 cm) of the Ahk horizon in the ground soil, gives a post-bomb value of F14C of ∼1.645, only consistent with formation in the 1960s. The paleosol, formed in the colluvial beds of the section, with its 2Ahbk/3Bmbk/3Cbk/3Cubk profile (Figure 6)—the combined ground-paleosol, approximately 120-cm thick—correlates with the thickness of postglacial Late Holocene paleosols in other catchments of central Southern Ontario (Mahaney et al. Reference Mahaney, Hancock, Somelar and Milan2016). The one-century spread (for both raw and calibrated ages) for development of the 2Ahbk horizon is probably a minimum given that the uppermost part of this horizon was likely eroded (truncated) when it was over-topped by colluvial emplacement—the deposit in which the ground soil formed. Particle size trends through the succession (Figure 6) follow unremarkable variations from sampling site 20 in the upper till body of R47 at 240-cm depth, becoming less silty in the sand beds upward in section, grading into higher silt content further up. The highest silt values are in the 2Ahbk, which may be air-influxed sediment. The argument for pedogenesis in this young buried pedon rests more on slow build-up of organic carbon without demonstrable removal of carbonate and/or increase in clay.

Figure 6 R47 section in colluvium, mixed outwash, and Halton moraine sediment in the upper part of section R47 (Mahaney and Hancock Reference Mahaney and Hancock1993a, Reference Mahaney and Hancock1993b).

Figure 7 R47A section showing the upper part of the R47 Section with moraine, outwash and colluvial deposits resampled in 2020—view to the south along Little Rouge Creek.

Figure 8 R47A profile with new AMS 14C from upper and lower beds in the Ahbk horizon providing ca. 110 yr for its establishment prior to burial by colluvium. Burial 304 yr BP in the mid 17th century places displacement within the mid-LIA. Positive AMS 14C ages for the upper and lower beds of the Ahbk horizon show median probability ages little different than raw conventional ages.

R47A Colluvial Succession

These two, near-parallel soil/paleosol sections—R47 and R47A—exhibit two distinct differences in profile horizonation: firstly, the presence of fresh sediment (Cuk) between the surface soil and the 2Ahbk of the paleosol in the R47A profile (Figure 8); secondly, a 15–20-cm difference in the thickness of the ground soil (30–35 cm in R47 and 50–60 cm in R47A). We did not carry out a full excavation of the paleosol in R47A, because we sought only to achieve AMS 14C dating of the buried 2Ahbk horizon, the lower horizons already having been fully analyzed in Mahaney and Hancock (Reference Mahaney and Hancock1993b).

West Duffins Creek—Floodplain and Terraces

West Duffins Creek (Figure 1A), like the neighboring Rouge catchments, winds its way southward from the Interlobate Moraine (formed by combined action of the Simcoe and Ontario lobes of the LIS) into Lake Ontario, exposing similar successions with variable incisions of Wisconsin-age till, moraine, and deltaic sediment. The southern reaches of the basin show the greatest range of floodplain and older terraces (Figure 1A). These deposits, ranging from recent, fresh ice-dammed deposits, to older terraces with mature Inceptisols formed in alluvium, lie on top of unweathered, thick, deltaic sediment of Scarborough age, as outlined in the Southern Ontario glacial succession of Terasmae and Dreimanis (Reference Terasmae, Dreimanis and Mahaney1976), Mahaney and Hancock (Reference Mahaney and Hancock1993a, Reference Mahaney and Hancock1993b) and Sharpe et al. (Reference Sharpe, Barnett, Russell, Brennand and Gorrell1999). As in the nearby Rouge catchments, the soil deposit-weathering trends in the W. Duffins Basin includes overbank ice-dammed sediment that overtop floodplain successions of Ahb/Cubk/Ahbk/Cbkox/Cbk/Cubk profiles. On higher terraces, epipedons (Ah-Bw/m horizons) are clearly differentiated, free of dissolved carbonate, and occur in overlying variations of Cox/Ck/Cuk substrate horizons, similar to profiles R71 and R15 in the Rouge catchments. Unfortunately, 14C datable materials are rarely found within these soil stratigraphic successions (excluding WD5 discussed below), the only dating methods being limited to soil-profile expression, acid dissolution of carbonate during expanding thickness of epipedons with age, and extractable forms of Fe and Al (Mahaney et al. Reference Mahaney, Hancock, Somelar and Milan2016). The two 14C dates attempted both gave post-bomb results.

WD5 Section

East of the Rouge, in the West Duffins Creek floodplain, a buried soil (site WD5, Figure 1A) with ∼70 cm thickness, includes a thin, 8-cm-thick Bw horizon (Figure 9A), which is the first of its kind in all of the floodplain sites investigated since 1973. The conventional age of its 2Ahb horizon is 600 ±70 yr BP (BGS-2627), which calibrates to between AD 1280 and AD 1433 (Figure 9B), placing the sediment to the beginning of a “Little Ice Age” (LIA) in Ontario at AD 1300 discussed by Finkelstein and Davis (Reference Finkelstein and Davis2006), even though this age range is more commonly associated with the Medieval Warm Period ∼750–1350 AD (Crowley Reference Crowley2000; Goosse et al. Reference Goosse2006). More commonly, the age bracket for the Little Ice Age ranges from ∼1450–∼1850 AD (Crowley Reference Crowley2000), although this varies among authors. Because the buried soil epipedon was truncated during deposition by overlying beds, its age is a minimum, reinforcing the argument that an enduring floodplain was stable long enough for an Inceptisol to develop in its distal and older sector, which was later buried ∼700–900 yr ago. With the floodplain in both drainages taking up to 60% of the valley width, its age must extend at least to a few millennia. Details of particle size and mineralogy are similar to those for R13 reported here (Figure 3), with downward trends indicating a detrital bed succession. This is the first discovery of a Bw horizon in floodplain sediments in any of the prominent successions of South-Central Ontario, and presumably with a minimum conventional age of 600 ± 70 yr BP.

Figure 9 (A) WD5 profile from the adjacent West Duffin Creek Catchment, located in a floodplain terrace ∼3 m height, with an Ahbk horizon 14C dated to 600 ±70 yr BP by conventional means; (B) Oxcal v.4.4.4 plot of the age with a 95.4% probability marking the calendar age between 1280 and 1433 AD placing it within the Medieval Warm Period.

DISCUSSION

Reconstruction of the postglacial history of catchments in central Southern Ontario is hampered by lack of radiocarbon-datable sediment with the exception of variable centuries-old floodplain and colluvial sections with Ahb or Ahbk soil horizons, the latter group being rare in the Rouge catchment. As indicated here, and summarized in Table 1, dating buried floodplain Ahb or Ahbk horizons is a hit and miss proposition. As often as not, one accurately dated bed is located within centimeters of, and potentially offset by, sediment carrying bomb imprints and post-1950 ages. It may be that bomb contamination comes from surface runoff and soil water throughput with contaminated organic carbon following root systems or micro channels within the floodplain matrix material. Given closeness to ground water, some contamination may ingress the floodplain from below, although the database for R13A argues against this possibility. Using IntCal, the F14C value is known at the start of contamination (at about AD 1950) and at termination (AD 2020) or less, but the IntCal analysis provides no atomic bomb contamination values between these two timelines. AMS 14C improves on older conventional dates by providing F14C at start-up and near present-day residual concentrations of contamination, if above 1.0 F14C. As well, for samples not subject to atomic bomb contamination, ages for Ahb and Ahbk horizons stretching centuries back into the Holocene provide higher resolution baseline dates, which is a vast improvement over previous conventional timelines and avoids listing such samples as “modern.”

AMS 14C Post-1950 Calibration

Concentration of AMS 14C contamination reported here is solvable only at the start-up of nuclear atmospheric testing at 1950, and the post-1950 cal AMS 14C return over several decades to ∼1980–2020 levels, measured at ∼1.0 F14C by AMS (see Figures 4B, 5B). These measurements show a relatively small peak in the 1950s, presumably from atmospheric tests by the US and Russia, followed by airborne testing at sites in Europe, with termination at 1980–2020 as shown on Figures 4B and 5B. Hence, many researchers, therefore, simply rate samples “modern.” Choosing between these two solutions—start up and termination—entails a consideration of fossil fuel and industrial combustion that releases 14C as free CO2, which adds to or may dilute bomb 14C, or both. These contaminants are not uniform across hemispheres, with bomb effects higher in the Arctic, lower in the mid-latitudes, where they are offset by industrial emissions, and lower still in the Southern Hemisphere.

Because small amounts of measured contamination still reside in the terrace samples, and nil in the floodplain, this suggests different leaching mechanisms at work in the two landforms. Surface runoff, soil water movement, and groundwater flux are the most likely leaching systems. It may be that with only two of these systems—runoff and soil water profile throughput—operating in the terraces, and all three operating in the floodplain, groundwater flux working in tandem with overbank flooding is the most effective system for reworking contaminants, as demonstrated with the range of contamination noted above. For particle binding to be responsible for retention of bomb contaminants, the only likely clay mineral present in all sections is illite or possibly illite-smectite, all dependent upon broken bonds and interlayer molecular water not fully filled with K+ or other ions. Broken bonds can take up water (Brindley and Brown Reference Brindley and Brown1980) and most likely bomb contamination.

AMS 14C Pre-1950 Ages

AMS 14C on uncontaminated samples demonstrates there can be more time for Ah and Ahb horizon development prior to burial and irrespective of depth. Above ∼70 cm, some samples yield post-1950 ages. The tentative approximate 70-cm depth is based on depth in the floodplain below which contamination appears to cease. The AMS 14C pre-1950 ages for samples, are consistent with the results of Fe/Al extractions outlined earlier by Mahaney et al. (Reference Mahaney, Hancock, Somelar and Milan2016), which show coupled Ahb/Coxb horizons requiring more than a century for weathering to register. This is especially the case with Fed (Na-dithionite Fe), which is used as a relative time proxy for weathering of total Fe (Fet) into secondary hydroxide/oxide form (Blume and Schwertmann Reference Blume and Schwertmann1969; Dormaar and Lutwick Reference Dormaar and Lutwick1983; Parfitt and Childs Reference Parfitt and Childs1988; Birkeland et al. Reference Birkeland, Burke and Benedict1989; Schwertmann and Taylor Reference Schwertmann and Taylor1989). Despite the high carbonate composition of most sediment in local catchments (∼80% carbonate and 20% silicate, on average), there is sufficient Fe-Al in the silicate group to provide a reasonable relative age assessment, even for sediment weathering over the last few centuries. Beyond the Fed/Fet ratio as a relative time estimate, Feo (acid ammonium oxalate) extractions taken from the floodplain soils provide, with arithmetic adjustment, an initial estimate of ferrihydrite (Fe10O13·9H2O), a major weathering product and one of the secondary oxihydroxides in soils. The concentration of Feo multiplied by 1.7 (Parfitt and Childs Reference Parfitt and Childs1988) equals the concentration of ferrihydrite. Since ferrihydrite is partly soluble, its increase with time is not linear, but linked with its two common oxihydroxides (hematite and goethite) = Fed, which by itself is a measure of relative time. The quotient Fed/Fet yields the slow release of oxihydroxides relative to total Fe.

To test Fed/Fet as an RD age measurement, calibrated by AMS 14C in the first few centuries, data in Figures 10A and 10B illustrate initial age plots rising slowly in progression and in alignment with stream incision estimates arrived at earlier, with a cap of 11 ka correlated with recession of the Ontario Lobe of the LIS and onset of Glacial Lake Iroquois. Even with wide ranges of Fed/Fet quotients, indicated by box volumes (Figure 10A), major valley incisions producing terrace systems, the older and middle terrace groups are clearly differentiated from the floodplain group.

Figure 10 (A) Correlation with box plots of Fed and projected valley incision ages for terraces in the Rouge basin. The floodplain sites (R13, 13A) were staggered from 0.1 to 0.3 × 103 14C YBP (Mahaney and Terasmae Reference Mahaney and Terasmae1988; Mahaney et al. Reference Mahaney, Hancock, Somelar and Milan2016). Ages of older sites are based on relative age indices as follows: R46 = 6–7 ka (Mahaney Reference Mahaney2015); R61, R62, and R60= <11ka, relative height of 15–17 m above the existing stream level in Little Rouge Creek (Mahaney et al. Reference Mahaney, Hancock, Milan, Pulleyblank, Costa and Milner2014b). Given the young ages for the pedostratigraphic units in the floodplains, all horizons are included in the analysis. For the older profiles—R46-R62—only the epipedons (Ah + Bw[t]) horizons are included in the analysis as these are the most weathered beds (horizons) in each profile (with modifications from Mahaney et al. Reference Mahaney, Hancock, Somelar and Milan2016); (B) positive regression of Fed illustrates growth of Fe oxihydroxides over time (from Mahaney et al. Reference Mahaney, Hancock, Somelar and Milan2016).

The study presented here is limited by the measurement of only bulk soils. This seriously limits the interpretation of the results and emphasizes the need for a systematic approach using specific temperature extractions (e.g., McGeehin et al. 2001) or perhaps selection of specific organic compounds (e.g., Casanova et al. Reference Casanova, Knowles, Mulhall, Sikora, Smyth, Richard and Evershed2021).

CONCLUSIONS

Previous conventional 14C age determinations of floodplain, terrace, and colluvial soils in the Rouge catchments yielded very young ages with large standard deviations, often with post-1950 ages far into the future. Using the AMS 14C ages obtained and reported here, we attempted to improve these age estimations to better assess soil successions in both floodplains, on the one hand (R13, R13A), and Ah horizons in higher terrace soils (R71, R15), coupled with colluvial (R47, R47A) sets, on the other. The floodplain soils, possibly containing reworked organic carbon yield both signatures of bomb 14C and AMS 14C ages at depths tentatively down to ∼70 cm. These older ages provide more time to explain variable concentration levels of Fe-Al extractions, which were used as RD age indicators in previous studies (Mahaney and Sanmugadas Reference Mahaney and Sanmugadas1986; Mahaney et al. Reference Mahaney, Hancock, Somelar and Milan2016). The new AMS ages are consistent with the time required to produce Fed age values (Fed=Na-dithionite extractions) obtained in more robust, that is, thicker buried soils in R13 and close correlatives in R13A.

Variations of organic carbon, particle size and/or section aspect may influence sample contamination, with root position and sediment microfractures controlling movement of contaminants. Perhaps the most important outcome of this work is the tighter age control on the younger stages of weathering and soil morphogenesis in two of the major catchments of South-Central Ontario. However, it is clear that a more detailed study should be undertaken. With better control over the first five-to-six hundred years of soil morphogenesis, it is now possible to estimate, with some reliability, the variable concentrations of specific secondary Fe and Al oxides and hydroxides, at start-up in the initial soil weathering phase. Because the calcite-silicate ratio is uniform within the parent materials in the catchments, soil morphogenetic changes—particle size, pH, organic carbon/N—in older pedons can be more tightly constrained within the established relative age proxy.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This work was funded by Quaternary Surveys, Toronto, by minor research grants to WCM from York University and from past grants from NSERC (Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada). WCM is indebted to students in Methods of Sediment and Soil Analysis (Geography 3510), Fall 2013 and 2015, for stimulating discussions of the data contained herein. We thank Paula Reimer and Stephen Hoper (Chrono 14, QUB) for monitoring the samples through the dating process and for assistance with the calibration curves. We also appreciate critical comments from four anonymous reviewers and gratefully thank the editor, Tim Jull, for his technical and editorial assistance.

COMPETING INTEREST DECLARATION

This is to confirm we have no competing interests to declare.

References

REFERENCES

Birkeland, PW. 1999. Soils and geomorphology. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 430 p.Google Scholar
Birkeland, PW, Burke, RM, Benedict, JB. 1989. Pedogenic gradients for iron and aluminum accumulation and phosphorus depletion in arctic and alpine soils as a function of time and climate. Quaternary Research 32:193204.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blume, H, Schwertmann, U. 1969. Genetic evaluation of profile distribution of aluminum, iron and manganese oxides. Soil Science Society of America Journal 33:438444.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brindley, GW, Brown, G, editors. 1980. Crystal structures of clay minerals and their X-ray identifications. Mineralogical Society Monograph 5. 495 p.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bronk Ramsey, C, Adolphi, F, Austin, W, et al. 2023. Development of the IntCal database. Radiocarbon: 1–17. doi: 10.1017/RDC.2023.53 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, DM, McKay, GA, Chapman, JL. 1968. The climate of Southern Ontario. Climatological Studies 5. Ottawa: Dept. of Transport, Meteorological Branch.Google Scholar
Bufe, A, Burbank, DW, Liu, L, Bookhagen, B, Qin, J, Chen, T, Li, JA, Thompson, J, Yang, H. 2017. Variations of lateral bedrock erosion rates control planation of uplifting folds in the foreland of the Tian Shan, NW China. Journal of Geophysical Research 122(12):24312467.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Canada Soil Survey Committee (CSSC). 1998. The Canadian System of Soil Classification. Publ. 1646. Ottawa: NRC Research Press. 187 p.Google Scholar
Carcaillet, J, Angel, I, Carrilo, E, Beck, C. 2013. Timing of the last glaciation in the Sierra Nevada of the Merida Andes, Venezuela. Quaternary Research 80:482494.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Casanova, E, Knowles, TDJ, Mulhall, I, Sikora, M, Smyth, J, Richard, P, Evershed, RP. 2021. Generation of two new radiocarbon standards for compound-specific radiocarbon analyses of fatty acids from bog butter finds. Radiocarbon 63(3):771783. doi: 10.1017/RDC.2021.1 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crowley, TJ. 2000. Causes of climate change over the past 1000 year. Science 289:270277.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Day, PE. 1965. Particle fractionation and particle size analysis. In: Black, CA, editor. Methods of soil analysis. Madison (WI): American Society of Agronomy. p. 545567.Google Scholar
Dormaar, JF, Lutwick, LE. 1983. Extractable Fe and Al as an indicator for buried soil horizons. Catena 10:167173.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ewing, H, Nater, E. 2002. Holocene soil development on till and outwash inferred from lake sediment geochemistry in Michigan and Wisconsin. Quaternary Research 57:234243.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Finkelstein, SA, Davis, AM. 2006. Paleoenvironmental records of water level and climatic changes from the middle to late Holocene at a Lake Erie coastal wetland, Ontario, Canada. Quaternary Research 65:3343.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goosse, H. et al. 2006. The origin of the European “Medieval Warm Period”. Climate of the Past 2:99113.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guzmán, O, Vassallo, R, Audemard, F, Mugnier, J-L, Oropeza, J, Yepez, S, Carcaillet, J, Alvarado, M, Carrillo, E. 2013. 10Be dating of river terraces of Santo Domingo River, on southeastern flank of the Mérida Andes, Venezuela: tectonic and climatic implications. Journal South American Earth Sciences 48:8596.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hodgson, JM. 1976. Soil survey field handbook. Soil Survey Tech. Monograph 5. Rothamsted Experimental Station, Harpenden, Herts, UK. 99 p.Google Scholar
Hua, Q, Barbetti, M, Rakowski, AZ. 2013. Atmospheric radiocarbon for the period 1950–2010. Radiocarbon 55(2):114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
IPCC. 2021. Climate Change 2021: the physical science basis, contribution of Working Group I to the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi: 10.1017/9781009157896 Google Scholar
Karrow, P. 1967. Pleistocene geology of the Scarborough area, South Ontario. Ontario Geological Survey, Geological Report 46. Queen’s Printer. 108 p.Google Scholar
Liberty, BA. 1955. Studies of the Ordovician system in Central Ontario. Proceedings of the Geological Association of Canada 7(1):139147.Google Scholar
Liberty, BA. 1964. Upper Ordovician stratigraphy of the Toronto area. In: Guidebook, geology of Central Ontario. American Association of Petroleum Geologists. p. 43–53.Google Scholar
Lichter, J. 1998. Rates of weathering and chemical depletion in soils across a chronosequence of Lake Michigan sand dunes. Geoderma 85:255282.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lovis, WA, Arbogast, AF, Monaghan, GW. 2012. The Geoarchaeology of Lake Michigan coastal dunes. East Lansing (MI): Michigan State University Press.Google Scholar
Macbeth Corp. 1992. Munsell soil color charts. Munsell Color.Google Scholar
Mahaney, WC. 2015. Clay mineral evidence of a bioclimatically-disrupted soil, Rouge River basin, south-central Ontario, Canada. Geomorphology 228:189199.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mahaney, WC, Hancock, RGV. 1993a, Glacial geology and geomorphology of the Rouge River basin, Southern Ontario, Field Trip Guidebook, 3rd Annual International Geomorphological Conference, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. 41 p.Google Scholar
Mahaney, WC, Hancock, RGV. 1993b. Late Quaternary stratigraphy and geochemistry of the R47 section, Rouge River Basin, south-central Ontario, Canada: correlation with Scarborough Bluffs. Journal of Quaternary Science 8(2):167178.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mahaney, WC, Hancock, RGV, Milan, A, Pulleyblank, C, Costa, PJM, Milner, MW. 2014. Reconstruction of Wisconsinan-age ice dynamics and compositions of Southern Ontario glacial diamictons, glaciofluvial/lacustrine and deltaic sediment, Geomorphology 206: 421439.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mahaney, WC, Hancock, RGV, Somelar, P, Milan, A. 2016. Iron and Al soil/paleosol extractions as age/environment indicators: some examples from a catchment in Southern Ontario, Canada, Geomorphology 270:159171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mahaney, WC, Milner, MW, Russell, S, Kalm, V, Bezada, M, Hancock, RGV, Beukens, R. 2001. Paleopedology of Middle Wisconsin/Weichselian paleosols in the Mérida Andes, Venezuela. Geoderma 104:215237.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mahaney, WC, Sanmugadas, K. 1986. Soil development as a function of time in the Rouge River Basin, south-central Ontario. Géographie physique et Quaternaire 40:207216.Google Scholar
Mahaney, WC, Terasmae, J. 1988. Notes on radiocarbon-dated Holocene soils in the Rouge River basin, south-central Ontario. Acta Geologica Hungarica 31(1–2):153163.Google Scholar
McAndrews, JH. 1981. Late Quaternary climate of Ontario: temperature trends from the fossil record. In: Mahaney WC, editor. Quaternary Paleoclimate. GeoAbstracts, Norwich. p. 319–355.Google Scholar
McAndrews, JH, Boyko-Diakonow, M. 1989. Pollen analysis of varved sediment at Crawford Lake, Ontario: evidence of Indian and European farming. In: Fulton, RJ, editor. Quaternary Geology of Canada and Greenland, Geology of Canada, Vol. 1. Ottawa: Geological Survey of Canada. p. 528530.Google Scholar
McGeehin, J, et al. 2001. Stepped-combustion in 14C dating of sediment in comparison with established techniques. Radiocarbon 43(2A):255–261.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ministry of Environment. 1984. The hydrogeology of Southern Ontario. 2nd edition. Toronto: Government Printer.Google Scholar
National Soil Survey Center (NSSC). 1995. Soil survey laboratory information manual. Soil Survey Investigations Report 45, version 1.00. U.S.D.A. 305 p.Google Scholar
Oyama, M, Takehara, H. 1970. Standard soil color charts. Japan Research Council for Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries.Google Scholar
Parfitt, R, Childs, CW. 1988. Estimation of forms of Fe and Al: a review and analysis of contrasting soils by dissolution and Moessbauer methods. Australian Journal Soil Research 26:121144.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Phillips, DW, McCulloch, JAW. 1972. The climate of the Great Lakes Basin. Climatological Studies 20. Environment Canada.Google Scholar
Phillips, WM, McDonald, EV, Reneau, SL, Poths, J. 1998. Dating soils and alluvium with cosmogenic 21Ne depth profiles: case studies from the Pajarito Plateau, New Mexico, USA. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 160:209223.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reimer, PJ, Austin, WEN, Bard, E, Bayliss, A, Blackwell, PG, Ramsey, CB, Butzin, M, Cheng, H, Edwards, RL, Friedrich, M, et al. 2020. The IntCal20 Northern Hemisphere radiocarbon age calibration curve (0–55 cal kBP). Radiocarbon 62(4):725757. doi: 10.1017/RDC.2020.41 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reimer, PJ, Brown, TA, Reimer, RW. 2004. Discussion: reporting and calibration of post-bomb 14C data. Radiocarbon 46(3):12991304.Google Scholar
Reimer, RW, Reimer, PJ. 2024. CALIBomb (www program) http://calib.org 2021 (accessed 2024-01-24).Google Scholar
Sauer, D, Schülli-Maurer, I, Sperstad, R, Sorensen, R, Stahr, K. 2008. Podzol development with time in sandy beach deposits in southern Norway. J. Plant Nutrition and Soil Science 171: doi: 10.1002/jpln.200700023483 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schwertmann, U, Taylor, RM. 1989. Iron oxides. In: Dixon JB, Weed SB, editors. Minerals in soil environments. Soil Science Soc. Am., Book Series No. 1. p. 379–437.Google Scholar
Sharpe, DR, Barnett, PJ, Russell, HAJ, Brennand, TA, Gorrell, G. 1999. Regional geological mapping of the Oak Ridges Moraine, Greater Toronto Area, southern Ontario. Current Research 1999-E. Geological Survey of Canada. p. 123–136.Google Scholar
Soil Survey Staff. 1975. Soil taxonomy. U.S.D.A. Agri. Handbook 436. 754 p.Google Scholar
Stuiver, M, Polach, HA. 1977. Discussion: reporting of 14C data. Radiocarbon 19(3):355363.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stuiver, M, Reimer, PJ. 1993. Extended 14C data base and revised CALIB 3.0 14C age program. Radiocarbon 35:215230.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Terasmae, J, Dreimanis, A. 1976. Quaternary stratigraphy of Southern Ontario. In: Mahaney, WC, editor. Quaternary stratigraphy of North America. Stroudsberg (PA): Dowden, Hutchinson & Ross. p. 5163.Google Scholar
Toronto and Region Conservation Authority (TRCA). 2007a. Rouge River State of the Watershed Report: Fluvial Geomorphology (Rept.).Google Scholar
Toronto and Region Conservation Authority (TRCA). 2007b. Rouge River State of the Watershed Report: Surface Water Quantity (Rept.).Google Scholar
Weninger, JM, McAndrews, JH. 1989. Late Holocene aggradation in the lower Humber River Valley, Toronto, Ontario. Canadian Journal of Earth Science 26:18421849.Google Scholar
Zreda, M, Shanahan, TM. 2000. Chronology of Quaternary glaciations in East Africa. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 177:2342.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1 (A) Surface geology and location of sampling sites in the Rouge River/Little Rouge Creek and West Duffins Creek catchments; (B) a more detailed view of Rouge/Little Rouge sites with topography shown by one-meter contours. Topographic controls taken from Sharpe et al. (1999).

Figure 1

Figure 2 Rouge Floodplain at Site R13A about ∼400 m from site R13. For the location of R13, sampled in 1974, see Figure 1B.

Figure 2

Figure 3 The R13 profile with conventional-derived 14C dates and particle size (clay=solid line; silt=dashed line-silt+clay-100=sand). OC=organic carbon; Ca=total Ca; Fe=total Fe.

Figure 3

Figure 4 (A) R13A profile with convoluted horizons relative to R13 and new AMS 14C ages. Positive AMS 14C ages for samples (1) and (3) show median probability little different than raw conventional ages.

Figure 4

Figure 4 (B) calculation of the post-1950 ages using bomb-14C calibration curves of Hua et al. (2013) for samples (2) and (4) in Figure 4A.

Figure 5

Figure 5 (A) Sections R71 (Late Holocene) and R15 (Early Holocene) in the Rouge/Little Rouge catchment. Arrows indicate sample locations; (B) calculation of the post-1950 ages using bomb-14C calibration curves of Hua et al. (2022) for sections R71 and R15 in Figure 5A.

Figure 6

Table 1 Details of conventional and AMS radiocarbon ages in Late Holocene soils of the Rouge Catchment, South Central Ontario

Figure 7

Figure 6 R47 section in colluvium, mixed outwash, and Halton moraine sediment in the upper part of section R47 (Mahaney and Hancock 1993a, 1993b).

Figure 8

Figure 7 R47A section showing the upper part of the R47 Section with moraine, outwash and colluvial deposits resampled in 2020—view to the south along Little Rouge Creek.

Figure 9

Figure 8 R47A profile with new AMS 14C from upper and lower beds in the Ahbk horizon providing ca. 110 yr for its establishment prior to burial by colluvium. Burial 304 yr BP in the mid 17th century places displacement within the mid-LIA. Positive AMS 14C ages for the upper and lower beds of the Ahbk horizon show median probability ages little different than raw conventional ages.

Figure 10

Figure 9 (A) WD5 profile from the adjacent West Duffin Creek Catchment, located in a floodplain terrace ∼3 m height, with an Ahbk horizon 14C dated to 600 ±70 yr BP by conventional means; (B) Oxcal v.4.4.4 plot of the age with a 95.4% probability marking the calendar age between 1280 and 1433 AD placing it within the Medieval Warm Period.

Figure 11

Figure 10 (A) Correlation with box plots of Fed and projected valley incision ages for terraces in the Rouge basin. The floodplain sites (R13, 13A) were staggered from 0.1 to 0.3 × 103 14C YBP (Mahaney and Terasmae 1988; Mahaney et al. 2016). Ages of older sites are based on relative age indices as follows: R46 = 6–7 ka (Mahaney 2015); R61, R62, and R60= <11ka, relative height of 15–17 m above the existing stream level in Little Rouge Creek (Mahaney et al. 2014b). Given the young ages for the pedostratigraphic units in the floodplains, all horizons are included in the analysis. For the older profiles—R46-R62—only the epipedons (Ah + Bw[t]) horizons are included in the analysis as these are the most weathered beds (horizons) in each profile (with modifications from Mahaney et al. 2016); (B) positive regression of Fed illustrates growth of Fe oxihydroxides over time (from Mahaney et al. 2016).