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Holocene glaciation of the central Sierra Nevada,California
Authors:Nicole D. Bowerman  Douglas H. Clark
Affiliation:1. U.S. Geological Survey Geosciences and Environmental Change Science Center, Denver, CO, USA;2. University of Illinois-Chicago, Department of Earth and Environmental Science, Chicago, IL, USA;3. U.S. Geological Survey Volcano Science Center, Menlo Park, CA, USA;4. University of Minnesota-Duluth, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences and Large Lakes Observatory, Duluth, MN, USA;5. Idaho State University, Departments of Biological Sciences and Geosciences, Pocatello, ID, USA;6. University of Pittsburgh, Department of Geology and Environmental Science, Pittsburgh, PA, USA;1. Department of Biological, Geological, and Environmental Sciences, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, OH 44115, USA;2. Great Sand Dunes National Park, Mosca, CO 81146, USA
Abstract:Sediment cores from two bedrock-dammed lakes in North Fork Big Pine Creek, Sierra Nevada, California, preserve the most detailed and complete record of Holocene glaciation yet recovered in the region. The lakes are fed by outwash from the Palisade Glacier, the largest (~1.3 km2) and presumably longest-lived glacier in the range, and capture essentially all of the rock flour it produces. Distinct late-Holocene (Matthes) and late-Pleistocene (Recess Peak) moraines lie between the modern glacier and the lakes. The lakes have therefore received continuous sedimentation from the basin since the retreat of the Tioga glacier (Last Glacial Maximum) and capture rock flour related to all post-LGM advances. A total of eight long cores (up to 5.5 m sediment depth) and one short surface sediment short core preserve a coherent record of fluctuating rock flour flux to the lakes through the Holocene. Age constraints on rock flour spikes in First and Second lakes based on 31 14C-dated macrofossils indicate Holocene glaciation began ~3200 cal yr B P, followed by a possible glacier maximum at ~2800 cal yr B P and four distinct glacier maxima at ~2200, ~1600, ~700 and ~250-170 cal yr. B.P., the most recent maximum being the largest.Reconstruction of the equilibrium-line altitudes (ELA) associated with each distinct advance recorded in the moraines (Recess Peak, Matthes, and modern) indicates ELA depressions (relative to modern) of ~250 m and 90 m for Recess Peak and Matthes advances, respectively. These differences represent decreases in summer temperatures of 1.7–2.8 °C (Recess Peak) and 0.2–2° (Matthes), and increases in winter precipitation of 22-34 cm snow water equivalent (s.w.e.) (Recess Peak) and 3-26 cm s.w.e. (Matthes) compared to modern conditions. Although small, these changes are significant and similar to those noted in the Cascade Range to the north, and represent a significant departure from historical climate trends in the region.
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