Dendroecological Evidence of Lake-Level Changes during the Last Three Centuries in Subarctic Québec
- 1 September 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Quaternary Research
- Vol. 30 (2) , 210-220
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0033-5894(88)90025-7
Abstract
Dendroecological analysis of black spruces (Picea mariana (Mill.) BSP.) near the shore of Clearwater Lake in the eastern Canadian subarctic yielded information on water level over the past three centuries. Tree positions, growth froms, layering, tree ring patterns, and ice scars provide direct evidence of a major rise in lake level. From the 17th century to the present, trees on the lake shore were progressively submerged by the increasing water level, which reached a maximum in this century. Higher levels began around the mid-18th century when shoreline spruce trees started to lean because extensive wave erosion caused landward shore displacement. High mortality of leaning spruce and abundant ice scar formation occurred during this century. The rise in water level in inferred to have been caused by snowier winters occurring parallel to climatic warming.This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Variations in Lake Levels during the Holocene in North America: An Indicator of Changes in Atmospheric Circulation PatternsGéographie physique et Quaternaire, 2007
- La déglaciation d’une partie du versant hudsonien québécois : bassins des rivières Nastapoca, Sheldrake et à l’Eau ClaireGéographie physique et Quaternaire, 2007
- Light Rings in Subarctic Conifers as a Dendrochronological ToolQuaternary Research, 1986
- Global temperature variations between 1861 and 1984Nature, 1986
- 14C and Th/U Dating of Pleistocene and Holocene Stromatolites from East African PaleolakesQuaternary Research, 1986
- Freshwater to marine-like environments from Holocene lakes in northern SaharaNature, 1985
- Reconstructed Summer Degree Days in Central Alaska and Northwestern Canada since 1524Quaternary Research, 1985
- Variations in Surface Air Temperatures: Part 2. Arctic Regions, 1881–1980Monthly Weather Review, 1982
- Ecology of a Black Spruce (Picea mariana) Clonal Population in the Hemiarctic Zone, Northern Quebec: Population Dynamics and Spatial DevelopmentArctic and Alpine Research, 1981
- Ice action in the lacustrine environment. A review with particular reference to subarctic Quebec, CanadaEarth-Science Reviews, 1979