A 14,500-year record of landscape change from Okpilak Lake, northeastern Brooks Range, northern Alaska

被引:0
|
作者
W. Wyatt Oswald
Daniel G. Gavin
Patricia M. Anderson
Linda B. Brubaker
Feng Sheng Hu
机构
[1] Emerson College,Science Program, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders
[2] University of Oregon,Department of Geography
[3] University of Washington,Quaternary Research Center
[4] University of Washington,School of Environmental and Forest Sciences
[5] University of Illinois,Department of Plant Biology and Department of Geology
来源
Journal of Paleolimnology | 2012年 / 48卷
关键词
Glacier; Holocene; Lake sediment; Paleoecology; Pollen; River aggradation;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Analyses of lithology, organic-matter content, magnetic susceptibility, and pollen in a sediment core from Okpilak Lake, located in the northeastern Brooks Range, provide new insights into the history of climate, landscape processes, and vegetation in northern Alaska since 14,500 cal year BP. The late-glacial interval (>11,600 cal year BP) featured sparse vegetation cover and the erosion of minerogenic sediment into the lake from nearby hillslopes, as evidenced by Cyperaceae-dominated pollen assemblages and high magnetic susceptibility (MS) values. Betula expanded in the early Holocene (11,600–8,500 cal year BP), reducing mass wasting on the landscape, as reflected by lower MS. Holocene sediments contain a series of silt- and clay-dominated layers, and given their physical characteristics and the topographic setting of the lake on the braided outwash plain of the Okpilak River, the inorganic layers are interpreted as rapidly deposited fluvial sediments, likely associated with intervals of river aggradation, changes in channel planform, and periodic overbank flow via a channel that connects the river and lake. The episodes of fluvial dynamics and aggradation appear to have been related to regional environmental variability, including a period of glacial retreat during the early Holocene, as well as glacial advances in the middle Holocene (5,500–5,200 cal year BP) and during the Little Ice Age (500–400 cal year BP). The rapid deposition of multiple inorganic layers during the early Holocene, including thick layers at 10,900–10,000 and 9,400–9,200 cal year BP, suggests that it was a particularly dynamic interval of fluvial activity and landscape change.
引用
收藏
页码:101 / 113
页数:12
相关论文
共 21 条
  • [1] A 14,500-year record of landscape change from Okpilak Lake, northeastern Brooks Range, northern Alaska
    Oswald, W. Wyatt
    Gavin, Daniel G.
    Anderson, Patricia M.
    Brubaker, Linda B.
    Hu, Feng Sheng
    JOURNAL OF PALEOLIMNOLOGY, 2012, 48 (01) : 101 - 113
  • [2] MULTIPLE EPISODES OF CENOZOIC DENUDATION IN THE NORTHEASTERN BROOKS-RANGE - FISSION-TRACK DATA FROM THE OKPILAK BATHOLITH, ALASKA
    OSULLIVAN, PB
    HANKS, CL
    WALLACE, WK
    GREEN, PF
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES, 1995, 32 (08) : 1106 - 1118
  • [3] Patterns of Change within a Tundra Landscape: 22-year Landsat NDVI Trends in an Area of the Northern Foothills of the Brooks Range, Alaska
    Raynolds, Martha K.
    Walker, Donald A.
    Verbyla, David
    Munger, Corinne A.
    ARCTIC ANTARCTIC AND ALPINE RESEARCH, 2013, 45 (02) : 249 - 260
  • [4] A 2000 year varve-based climate record from the central Brooks Range, Alaska
    Bird, Broxton W.
    Abbott, Mark B.
    Finney, Bruce P.
    Kutchko, Barbara
    JOURNAL OF PALEOLIMNOLOGY, 2009, 41 (01) : 25 - 41
  • [5] A 2000 year varve-based climate record from the central Brooks Range, Alaska
    Broxton W. Bird
    Mark B. Abbott
    Bruce P. Finney
    Barbara Kutchko
    Journal of Paleolimnology, 2009, 41 : 25 - 41
  • [6] A 12000 YEAR RECORD OF VEGETATION CHANGE AND SOIL DEVELOPMENT FROM WIEN LAKE, CENTRAL ALASKA
    HU, FS
    BRUBAKER, LB
    ANDERSON, PM
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY-REVUE CANADIENNE DE BOTANIQUE, 1993, 71 (09): : 1133 - 1142
  • [7] A 14,000 yr paleoenvironmental record from Windmill Lake, Central Alaska: Lateglacial and Holocene vegetation in the Alaska range
    Bigelow, NH
    Edwards, ME
    QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS, 2001, 20 (1-3) : 203 - 215
  • [8] Holocene climate and landscape change in the northeastern Tibetan Plateau foreland inferred from the Zhuyeze Lake record
    Mischke, Steffen
    Lai, Zhongping
    Long, Hao
    Tian, Fang
    HOLOCENE, 2016, 26 (04): : 643 - 654
  • [9] A 14,000-YEAR POLLEN RECORD FROM SITHYLEMENKAT LAKE, NORTH-CENTRAL ALASKA
    ANDERSON, PM
    REANIER, RE
    BRUBAKER, LB
    QUATERNARY RESEARCH, 1990, 33 (03) : 400 - 404
  • [10] A 31,000 year record of paleoenvironmental and lake-level change from Harding Lake, Alaska, USA
    Finkenbinder, Matthew S.
    Abbott, Mark B.
    Edwards, Mary E.
    Langdon, Catherine T.
    Steinman, Byron A.
    Finney, Bruce P.
    QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS, 2014, 87 : 98 - 113