Holocene Development of Parabolic Dunes in the Central St. Lawrence Lowland, Québec
- 1 September 1987
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Quaternary Research
- Vol. 28 (2) , 196-209
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0033-5894(87)90059-7
Abstract
Stabilized parabolic dunes in the central St. Lawrence Lowland are oriented NE-SW, in the postulated direction of dune-building winds coming from anticyclonic air circulation induced by the retreating Laurentide Ice Sheet about 10,000 yr ago. The eolian chronology reconstructed from several sections in mixed dune-peatland environments indicates that postglacial plant colonization, characterized by a fortuitous assemblage of arctic-subarctic and boreal elements, preceded dune formation during Champlain Sea regression around 10,000 yr B.P. Confined peatlands and small forests were buried by eolian sands between 10,000 and 7500 yr B.P. under dry and temperate conditions. This eolian episode lasted about 250014C yr and ended when cyclonic air circulation similar to the present humid climatic regime was established following the breakup and disappearance of the Laurentide Ice Sheet over Hudson Bay and peripheral areas. Dune stabilization, through paludification of well-drained eolian sands about 7500 yr B.P., suggests a major shift in climate toward wetter conditions that have been characteristic during most of the Holocene in eastern North America. Minor eolian erosion induced by wildfire was recorded during late Holocene time (about 1250 yr B.P.). Anthropogenic perturbation (logging and agriculture practice) was also responsible for recent very local eolian activity.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pleistocene Climates in Central Europe: At least 17 Interglacials after the Olduvai EventPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,2017
- Late-glacial climatic oscillation in Atlantic Canada equivalent to the Allerød/younger Dryas eventNature, 1986
- Simulation of the climate of 18,000 years BP: Results for the North American/North Atlantic/European sector and comparison with the geologic record of North AmericaQuaternary Science Reviews, 1985
- Stabilized dune ridges in northern SaskatchewanCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1981
- Sakami moraine, Quebec: A 500-km-long moraine without climatic controlGeology, 1981
- Emplacement of the St. Narcisse Moraine as a Climatic Event in Eastern CanadaQuaternary Research, 1975
- The Wisconsin Laurentide Ice Sheet: Dispersal Centers, Problems of Rates of Retreat, and Climatic ImplicationsArctic and Alpine Research, 1973
- Radiocarbon Isochrones on the Disintegration of the Laurentide Ice SheetArctic and Alpine Research, 1969
- Deglaciation and Differential Postglacial Rebound in the Appalachian Region of Southeastern QuebecThe Journal of Geology, 1968
- Marine crevasse fillings in the Lotbiniere region, QuebecAmerican Journal of Science, 1950