Greatlakean Substage: A Replacement for Valderan Substage in the Lake Michigan Basin
- 1 September 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Quaternary Research
- Vol. 6 (3) , 411-424
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0033-5894(67)90005-1
Abstract
New evidence from recent field and seismic investigations in the Lake Michigan basin and in the type areas of the Valders, Two Creeks and Two Rivers deposits necessitates revision of late-glacial ice-front positions, rock- and time-stratigraphic nomenclature and climatic interpretations and deglaciation patterns for the period ca. 14,000–7,000 radiocarbon years B.P. The previously reported and long accepted pattern of deglaciation for the Lake Michigan basin started with a regular retreat from the Lake Border Morainic System, with a minor oscillation marked by the Port Huron moraine(s) and then an extensive Twocreekan deglaciation followed by a major (320 km) post-Twocreekan advance (Valders). However, we now record a major retreat between the times of the Lake Border and Port Huron moraines, followed by a gradual retreat from the Port Huron limit and interrupted by a minor standstill (deposition of Manitowoc Till), a retreat (Twocreekan) and a readvance (Two Rivers Till). No Woodfordian or younger readvance was as extensive as had been the preceding one. This sequence argues for a normal, climatically controlled, progressive deglaciation rather than one interrupted by a major post-Twocreekan (formerly Valderan) surge. This revision appears finally to harmonize the geologic evidence and the palynological record for the Great Lakes region. Our investigations show that Valders Till from which the Valderan Substage was named is late-Woodfordian in age. We propose the term “Greatlakean” as a replacement for the now misleading time-stratigraphic term “Valderan”. The type section and the definition of the upper and lower boundaries of the Greatlakean Substage remain the same as those originally proposed for the Valderan Substage but the name is changed.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Deglaciation History of the Lake Superior Region and its Climatic ImplicationsQuaternary Research, 1974
- Wisconsin Glaciation in the Huron, Erie, and Ontario LobesPublished by Geological Society of America ,1973
- Tunnel Valleys, Glacial Surges, and Subglacial Hydrology of the Superior Lobe, MinnesotaPublished by Geological Society of America ,1973
- Wisconsinan Climatic History Interpreted from Lake Michigan Lobe Deposits and SoilsPublished by Geological Society of America ,1973
- Climatic Changes in Southern Connecticut Recorded by Pollen Deposition at Rogers LakeEcology, 1969
- Late- and postglacial vegetational history in Wisconsin, particularly changes associated with the Valders readvanceAmerican Journal of Science, 1961
- The Cary-Mankato-Valders ProblemThe Journal of Geology, 1957
- The stages of Lake Chicago; their causes and correlationsAmerican Journal of Science, 1951
- Pleistocene of part of northeastern WisconsinGSA Bulletin, 1943
- THE NAMING OF THE SUBDIVISIONS OF THE WISCONSIN GLACIAL AGEScience, 1933