Wisconsin glaciation

Maximum glaciation of the northern hemisphere during the Quaternary climatic cycles

The Wisconsin Glacial Episode, also called the Wisconsinan glaciation, was the most recent glacial period of the North American ice sheet complex. This advance included the Cordilleran Ice Sheet, which nucleated in the northern North American Cordillera; the Innuitian ice sheet, which extended across the Canadian Arctic Archipelago; the Greenland ice sheet; and the massive Laurentide ice sheet,[1] which covered the high latitudes of central and eastern North America. This advance was synchronous with global glaciation during the last glacial period, including the North American alpine glacier advance, known as the Pinedale glaciation. The Wisconsin glaciation extended from approximately 85,000 to 11,000 years ago, between the Sangamon interglacial (known globally as the Eemian stage) and the current interglacial, the Holocene. The maximum ice extent occurred approximately 25,000–21,000 years ago during the last glacial maximum, also known as the Late Wisconsin in North America.

This glaciation radically altered the geography north of the Ohio River. At the height of the Wisconsin Episode glaciation, the ice sheet covered most of Canada, the Upper Midwest, and New England, as well as parts of Idaho, Montana, and Washington. On Kelleys Island in Lake Erie or in New York City's Central Park,[2] the grooves left by these glaciers can be easily observed. In southwestern Saskatchewan and southeastern Alberta, a suture zone between the Laurentide and Cordilleran ice sheets formed the Cypress Hills, the northernmost point in North America that remained south of the continental ice sheets. During much of the glaciation, sea level was low enough to permit land animals, including humans, to occupy Beringia (the Bering Land Bridge) and move between North America and Siberia. As the glaciers retreated, glacial lakes were breached in great floods of water such as the Kankakee Torrent, which reshaped the landscape south of modern Chicago as far as the Ohio and Mississippi rivers.

Times

Two related movements have been termed Wisconsin: Early Wisconsin and Late Wisconsin.[3]:40-75 The Early Wisconsin was the bigger of the two and extend farther west and south. It retreated an unknown distance before halting. During this period of quiet, the glacial deposits were eroded and weathered. This first Wisconsin period erased all the Illinoian glacial topography that extended over.[3] The Late Wisconsin ice sheet extended more towards the west than the earlier movements. This may have been due to changes in the accumulation center of the ice sheet, topographic changes introduced by the Early phase or by pressure changes in the ice mass in the north.[3]

Table I
Table VII – Estimated Age of Glacial Episodes (Leverett) [3]:74
Age Years before Present (YBP)
Culmination of Late Wisconsin 50,000
Culmination of Early Wisconsin 100,000
Beginning of Wisconsin 150,000
Culmination of Illinoian 300,000
Beginning of Illinoian 350,000
Culmination of Pre-Illinoian, i.e., old Nebraskan[4][5] 550,000
Beginning of Pre-Illinoian 1,200,000

Continental ice sheets

Ice caps

Table II
Ice Caps[6]
Keewatin ice sheet Laurentide Ice Sheet Nova Scotia Ice Cap Newfoundland Ice Cap Greenland Ice Cap

Labrador Ice Sheet

The Labrador Ice Sheet centered east of Hudson Bay. Expanding towards the southwest, it reached into the eastern edge of Manitoba and across the Great Lakes to the Ohio River, upwards of 1,600 miles (2,600 km)from its source. Its eastern lobes covered New England and reached south to Cape Cod and Long Island, New York.[7]

Ice lobes

Table III Laurentide ice sheet
Glacial lobes and sublobes of the southern Laurentide Ice Sheet during the late Wisconsin Glaciation.[8]
Major Lobes Minor Lobes
Des Moines Grantsburg St. Louis Rainey
Lake Superior[6] Wadena Chippewa[6] Wisconsin Valley[6] Langlade[6]
Green Bay[6]
Lake Michigan[6] Delavan Harvard-Princeton Peoria Decatur
Minor lobes: Milwaukee, Two Rivers; Straits of Mackinac
Saginaw
Lake Huron[6] East White[6] Miami[6] Scioto[6]
Lake Erie[6]
Lake Ontario[6] Lake Champlain[6] Hudson River[6]
unnamed lobe in Quebec – New England Connecticut Valley[6] Buzzards Bay[6] Cape Cod[6] Georges Bank[6]

Keewatin Ice Sheet

The Keewatin Ice Sheet began west of Hudson Bay in the Canadian Territory of Keewatin The ice moved south some 1,500 miles (2,400 km) into Kansas and Missouri. To the west, it reached 1,000 miles (1,600 km) to the foothills of the Rocky Mountains.[7]

Cordilleran Ice Sheet

The Cordilleran Ice Sheet has left remnants throughout the Northern Rocky Mountains. Unlike the other two ice sheets, this one is mountain based covering the British Columbia and reaching into northern Washington State and Montana. The Cordilleran Ice Sheet has more of an Alpine style of many glaciers merged into a whole. The striations made by the ice field in moving over the bedrock show that it moved principally to the west through the passes of the coast range.[7]

Formation of proglacial and prehistoric lakes

Proglacial lakes in the Great Lakes basin

When the ice sheet melts northward from a moraine, water begins to be ponded between this moraine (aka a divide) and the ice front. The ice acts as a dam. The water cannot drain through the ice sheet, which for the Wisconsin period covered most of the proglacial river valleys. Numerous small, isolated water bodies form between the moraine and the ice front. As the ice sheet continues to melt and recede northward, these ponds combine into a proglacial lake. Without an available outlet, the water levels continue to rise until it reaches one or more low spots along the rim of the moraine, or the ice sheet retreats opening access to a lower portion of the moraine.[3]:40-99 An outlet forms through these low spots, until one becomes dominant when erosion, lowers the outlet and lake surface.

Running water

Ice melt and rainfall carried large quantities of clay, sand, and gravel from the ice mass. Clays could be moved long distances by moving water, while sand and gravel could not. Thus, sand and gravel landforms developed along the sides and front of the ice sheet.[3] Elongated accumulations are known as kames. Mounds along the frontal edge of the ice are moraines. When a subglacial tunnel began infilling, the results are long winding eskers. The sweeping plain of sand and gravel beyond the ice margin and a terminal moraine is the outwash plain .[3] The materials left under the glacier when it melts back is called the ground moraine or till plain.[3] Till is highly permeable and creates a large ground reserves for water. This is highly desirable for human economic development as a source of water.[3]

Stages of the Wisconsin episode

Table IV
Maxima of the Wisconsin ice sheets[9]
Western Ice Eastern Ice Proximate years ago Position of ice border
Mankato Valders 25,000 Northern Washington, Idaho, and Montana to the Continental Divide – north of Edmonton – 65 miles east of Edmonton – northwest corner of North Dakota – Des Moines – west end of Lake Superior – Milwaukee – Port Huron – Buffalo – Schuylerville – St. Johnsbury.
(Great reduction of ice) Cary 27,500 Minneapolis – north Wisconsin – south of Chicago – Central Ohio – 50 miles south of Buffalo – Binghamton - Northampton
Tazewell 40,000 Rockford, Ill. – Peoria – south of Indianapolis – north of Cincinnati – northwestern Pennsylvania – central Long Island
Iowan No known ice 65,500 Northern Washington, Idaho, and Montana – northwest North Dakota – east central Iowa - Minneapolis

Role in human migration

Prehistoric human migration was greatly influenced by the last glacial period, known in North America as the Wisconsin glaciation. During much of the Wisconsin era, a land bridge across the Bering Strait allowed the first humans to reach North America from Asia (see Settlement of the Americas). Human migration routes opened during interglacial periods in Europe and Asia as well.[10]

Flora and fauna

North American flora and fauna species were distributed quite differently during the Wisconsin era, due to altered temperatures, surface water distribution, and in some cases coverage of earth surface by glaciers. A number of scientific studies have been conducted to determine species distribution, particularly during the Late Wisconsin and early to mid-Holocene. An example of findings is from the investigation of flora species using pollen-core samples in present-day northern Arizona. Here in the Waterman Hills researchers found that Juniperus osteosperma and Pinus monophylla were early to mid-Holocene dominant trees, while Monardella arizonica has been a continuously present understory plant. Celtis reticulata is an example of a plant present in the early Holocene following Wisconsin glacial retreat, a species no longer present at the Waterman Mountains site.[11]

See also

References

  1. Ann G. Harris, Esther Tuttle, Sherwood D. Tuttle. 1997. Geology of National Parks: Fifth Edition, Iowa, Kendall/Hunt Publishing ISBN 0-7872-5353-7
  2. SERC Media; Glacial Grooves, Central Park; Image 14884 is a 208 by 173 pixel JPEG; Uploaded: Apr5 09; Wayne Powell, CUNY Brooklyn College; http://serc.carleton.edu/details/images/14884.html
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Chapter II. Glacial History of the Huron-Erie Basin; Geological Report on Wayne County; W.H. Sherzer; Michigan Geological and Biological Survey, Publication 12, Geological Series 9; Lansing, Michigan; Wynkoop Hallenbeck Crawford Co., State Printers; 1913
  4. Attig, John W.; Mickelson, David M. (1999). Glacial processes past and present. Boulder, Colo: The Geological Society of America, Inc. ISBN 0-8137-2337-X
  5. Boellstorff, J (1978). "Chronology of some Late Cenozoic deposits from the central United States and the Ice Ages"(pdf). Transactions of the Nebraska Academy of Science 6: 35–49. Retrieved 2012-04-04.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 Geological Framework and Glaciation of the Eastern Area; Christopher L. Hill; pg 82-98
  7. 1 2 3 Chamberlin, Thomas C. and Salisbury, Rollin T., Geology, 3 Vols. 1906, Vol III., pp. 330-333.
  8. The southern Laurentide Ice Sheet; Cavid M. Mickelson and Patrick M. Colgan; Department of Geology, University of Wisconsin Madison; Madison, Wisconsin; 2003
  9. Correlation of Wisconsin Glacial Maxima; Ernst Antevs; ca 1943; The Quaternary Geology of Southeastern Wisconsin with a Chapter on the Older Rock Formations, Professional Paper 106; William C. Alden; United States Geological Survey; Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C.; 1918
  10. Harm J. De Blij. 2005. Why geography matters: three challenges facing America, 308 pages, p.69
  11. C. Michael Hogan, 2009. Elephant Tree: Bursera microphylla, GlobalTwitcher.com, ed. N. Stromberg
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