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Late Wisconsinan deglaciation and proglacial lakes development in the Charlevoix region,southeastern Québec,Canada
Authors:Etienne Brouard  Patrick Lajeunesse  Pierre A Cousineau  Étienne Govare  Jacques Locat
Institution:1. Centre d’études nordiques & Département de géographie, 2405 rue de la Terrasse, Université Laval, Quebec, QC, Canada;2. Centre d’étude sur les Ressources minérales (CERM), 555 boulevard de l'Université, Université du Québec à Chicoutimi, Saguenay, QC, Canada;3. Hydro‐Québec équipement, Montréal, QC, Canada;4. Département de géologie et de génie géologique, 1065 avenue de la Médecine, Université Laval, Québec, QC, Canada
Abstract:The Charlevoix region, in southeastern Québec, is characterized by a dramatic landscape formed by the junction of the Laurentian Highlands, the Charlevoix Astrobleme and the St Lawrence Estuary. At the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), the region was completely covered by the Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS). The complex topography of the region was the stage of many of the major deglacial events of southern Quebec (e.g. Goldthwait Sea Invasion, St Lawrence Ice‐Stream, Saint‐Narcisse Episode). We present a detailed reconstruction of the pattern of retreat of the LIS in the Charlevoix region based on the interpretation of ice‐marginal features (e.g. moraines, fans) and glaciolacustrine landforms and deposits, two extensive field campaigns, and the interpretation of high‐resolution 3D digital aerial photographs and LiDAR data. Our results indicate five moraine complexes in the region: the Rochette, the Brûlée, the Sainte‐Anne, the Saint‐Narcisse and the Mars‐Batiscan complexes. Deltas, fans, fine‐grained sediments, littoral deposits, drainage breaches and deposits were used to identify 91 palaeo‐proglacial lakes. The identification of these lakes and their relation to moraine complexes enabled the reconstruction of six stages of lake development during the Charlevoix deglaciation. The development of proglacial lakes occurred in all types of terrain (highlands, lowlands, transitory levels above marine limit). We conclude that local topography had a decisive effect on promoting both moraine deposition and lake development. We suggest that similar topographical regions (hilly‐mountainous) that were affected by major ice‐margin stabilizations during glacial retreat should have experience small lakes dominating valleys and topographical lows.
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