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LATE GLACIAL AND HOLOCENE ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE INFERRED FROM SEDIMENTARY ARCHIVES OF KUSAWA LAKE, BOUNDARY RANGE MOUNTAINS, YUKON, CANADA

Desloges, Joseph R. 1 ; Chow, Nicole 2 ; Gilbert, Robert 3

1 University of Toronto, Department of Geography
2 University of Toronto, Department of Geography
3 Queen's University, Department of Geography

Modern Kusawa Lake (142 kmē) drains a 4290 kmē catchment, 4.7% of which is glacier covered, in the Coast Mountains of the Yukon and northern British Columbia (Fig. 1). It lies in the southern extension of Glacial Lake Champagne formed in the Late Pleistocene when westward-flowing glaciers in the Takhini valley coalesced with eastward-flowing glaciers from the St. Elias complex. Geophysical, geomorphic and lake sediment cores document deglaciation of the lake, the presence of Lake Champagne, and the postglacial sedimentary environment of the basin. During the main phase of Lake Champagne (ca.12-11 ka BP), the water level stood at 772 m in the northern part of Kusawa Lake and 756 m in northern Dezadeash valley, both probably controlled by a spillway floored at 756 m to the north into the Nordenskiold River. This indicates differential isostatic rebound of 0.2 m/km from south to north. At that time glaciers in the Primrose valley and Takhini trunk valley built large deltas into Lake Champagne. A trunk glacier occupied the southern portion of Kusawa Lake, depositing a thick sequence of sediment in the basin (Fig. 2). Subsequently, the level fell to three major stages: 744 m, 714 m and its present level of 671 m. Lake levels were controlled by a spillway and subsequent down cutting of the sediment plug at the outlet of Kusawa Lake (Region I). Late Glacial and early Holocene sediment inputs to the lake were characterized by wash-in from exposed valley sides leaving distinctive acoustic facies in the north-central portion of Kusawa Lake.

In the southern portion of the lake (Region IV), acoustically well-layered sediments have accumulated to a thickness of at least 60 m (Fig. 2). A 2.8 m long submersible vibra-core taken from this region (Fig. 3) indicates average accumulation rates of 0.27 to 0.48 mm a-1 and thus the upper 3 m documents the whole of Holocene sediment inputs. These rates are in agreement with estimates made from cores taken in Region II of the lake and with other studies. The late glacial and very early Holocene sediment package comprises more than 95% of the accumulated sediments demonstrating thick and fast sedimentation in response to deglaciation and glacier-dammed lake drainage. Numerous and large lakes in the upper watershed trap some sediment resulting in the low Holocene sediment inputs despite significant modern glacial cover. However, sediments in the deep, medial, part of the lake (Fig. 3) show at least 15 major and 25 minor episodes of high-energy turbidity deposits (sand) throughout the Holocene. We speculate these are tied to: a) major, basin-wide, flood events generated from incursions of warmer and moist Pacific air masses; b) a mixture of sediment contributions from the best connected glacier-fed headwater rivers and from smaller drainage basins proximal to coring sites; and c) continuing instability of both the sub-aerial and sub-aqueous portions of Lake Champagne terraces.

Acknowledgments: The National Science and Engineering Council of Canada, the Yukon Geological Survey and Yukon Parks helped support and fund parts for this research. It was conducted under a permit issued by the Government of the Yukon.

 

Fig 1. Bathymetry of Kusawa Lake determined from acoustic survey in July 2004. Isobath interval is 20 m (solid lines) and 10 m (broken lines) below normal summer water level. Maximum depths are indicated. Location of acoustic results for Figure 2 is shown. Inset maps show the regional location, the drainage basin of Kusawa Lake, and modern glaciers (dark shading) in sub-basins of streams tributary to it.

 

Fig 2. CHIRP-II acoustic section from region IV in Kusawa Lake. View is down-lake.

 

Fig 3. Kusawa Lake core #324 showing generalized stratigraphy, the frequency and thickness of sand units and chronologic markers. OM (organic matter), C (clay), Si (silt), S (sand). MS (stones), Ash (regional volcanic ash).