2007
DOI: 10.7202/014754ar
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Glacial Isostatic Adjustment of the Laurentian Great Lakes Basin: Using the Empirical Record of Strandline Deformation for Reconstruction of Early Holocene Paleo-Lakes and Discovery of a Hydrologically Closed Phase*

Abstract: In the Great Lakes region, the vertical motion of crustal rebound since the last glaciation has decelerated with time, and is described by exponential decay constrained by observed warping of strandlines of former lakes. A composite isostatic response surface relative to an area southwest of Lake Michigan beyond the limit of the last glacial maximum was prepared for the complete Great Lakes watershed at 10.6 ka BP (12.6 cal ka BP). Uplift of sites computed using values from the response surface facilitated the… Show more

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Cited by 44 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…This erosional phase likely records a drop in regional base level during the Kirkfield low water phase, following the ice retreat beyond an isostatically depressed outlet near Fenelon Falls (Figs. 1, 3c, 14d, 15;Finamore 1985;Lewis et al 2005). Water levels are previously interpreted to have fallen by as much as 10-30 m during this time ( Fig.…”
Section: Paleoenvironmental Reconstructionmentioning
confidence: 77%
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“…This erosional phase likely records a drop in regional base level during the Kirkfield low water phase, following the ice retreat beyond an isostatically depressed outlet near Fenelon Falls (Figs. 1, 3c, 14d, 15;Finamore 1985;Lewis et al 2005). Water levels are previously interpreted to have fallen by as much as 10-30 m during this time ( Fig.…”
Section: Paleoenvironmental Reconstructionmentioning
confidence: 77%
“…3c). Isostatic rebound of this lake outlet allowed water levels to rise towards southern outlets and form main Lake Algonquin (11.4-10.5 14 C ka BP (13 300-12 400 cal year BP); Lewis et al 2005;Fig. 3c).…”
Section: Geologic Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
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