Middle Pleistocene age of the Nome River glaciation, northwestern Alaska
- 1 November 1991
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Quaternary Research
- Vol. 36 (3) , 277-293
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0033-5894(91)90003-n
Abstract
During the middle Pleistocene Nome River glaciation of northwestern Alaska, glaciers covered an area an order of magnitude more extensive than during any subsequent glacial intervals. The age of the Nome River glaciation is constrained by laser-fusion 40Ar/39Ar analyses of basaltic lava that overlies Nome River drift at Minnie Creek, central Seward Peninsula, that average 470,000 ± 190,000 yr (±1σ). Milligram-size subsamples of the lava were dated to identify and eliminate extraneous 40Ar enrichments that rendered the mean of conventional K-Ar dates on larger bulk samples of the same flow too old (700,000 ± 570,000 yr). While the 40Ar/39Ar analyses provide a minimum limiting age for the Nome River glaciation, maximum ages are provided by a provisional K-Ar date on a basaltic lava flow that underlies the Nome River drift at nearby Lave Creek, by paleomagnetic determinations of the drift itself at and near the type locality, and by amino acid epimerization analysis of molluscan fossils from nearshore sediments of the Anvilian marine transgression that underlie Nome River drift on the coastal plain at Nome. Taken together, the new age data indicate that the glaciation took place between 580,000 and 280,000 yr ago. The altitude of the Anvilian deposits suggests that eustatic sea level during the Anvilian transgression rose at least as high as and probably higher than during the last interglacial transgression; by correlation with the marine oxygen-isotope record, the transgression probably dates to stage 11 at 410,000 yr, and the Nome River glaciation is younger still. Analyses of floor altitudes of presumed Nome River cirques indicate that the Nome River regional snowline depression was at least twice that of the maximum late Wisconsin. The cause of the enhanced snowline lowering appears to be related to greater availability of moisture in northwestern Alaska during the middle Pleistocene.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Oxygen isotopes, ice volume and sea levelPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Aminostratigraphy of European marine interglacial depositsPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- South Carolina Interglacial Sites and Stage 5 Sea LevelsQuaternary Research, 1990
- Correlation diagrams in 40Ar/39Ar dating: Is there a correct choice?Geophysical Research Letters, 1988
- The influence of continental ice, atmospheric CO2, and land albedo on the climate of the last glacial maximumClimate Dynamics, 1987
- Interlaboratory Comparison of Amino Acid Enantiomeric Ratios in Fossil Pleistocene MollusksQuaternary Research, 1984
- A Pleistocene Sand Sea on the Alaskan Arctic Coastal PlainScience, 1981
- Quaternary Sea Level Fluctuations on a Tectonic coast: New 230Th/234U Dates from the Huon Peninsula, New GuineaQuaternary Research, 1974
- Sea Level History in Beringia During the Past 250,000 YearsQuaternary Research, 1973
- Late Pleistocene History of the North Pacific: Evidence from a Quantitative Study of Radiolaria in Core V21-173Quaternary Research, 1973