
The drainage of L ake O jibway in glaciolacustrine sediments of northern O ntario and Q uebec, C anada
Author(s) -
Daubois Virginie,
Roy Martin,
Veillette Jean J.,
Ménard Maxime
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
boreas
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.95
H-Index - 74
eISSN - 1502-3885
pISSN - 0300-9483
DOI - 10.1111/bor.12101
Subject(s) - geology , meltwater , silt , sediment , glacial period , forcing (mathematics) , geochemistry , geomorphology , oceanography , climatology
Physical evidence for the drainage of glacial lakes remains relatively rare in depositional records, giving rise to much debate on the location of outlets and discharge pathways, as well as on the climate impact of the attendant meltwater forcing. L ake O jibway developed following the withdrawal of the L aurentide I ce S heet in northern O ntario and Q uebec, C anada. The late‐stage evolution of this large ice‐dammed lake was influenced by the complex dynamics of the retreating ice margin, which highly complicates the identification of the termination of L ake O jibway in glaciolacustrine sediment records. Here, we document the composition of sections of rhythmites that contain in their upper part an anomalously thick and whitish bed (10–15 cm) that is in turn overlain by ∼1 m of faintly bedded rhythmites. Grain‐size analyses showed that the thick whitish bed consists primarily of fine to coarse silt (2–63 μm), contrasting with the lower and upper rhythmites that are largely dominated by clay (<2 μm). The detrital carbonate content of the thick silt bed is characterized by consistently high values (2.5 to 2.8%), whereas the bounding rhythmites show lower and highly variable values. Oxygen isotope measurements further show a marked change going from typical glacial meltwater values (∼ −29.6 to −27.7‰; VSMOW ) for the lower rhythmites and the silt bed to modern‐like meteoric values (−18.4 to −14.6‰) for the uppermost rhythmites. These data suggest that this marker bed may be associated with a major drawdown event that possibly corresponds to the final drainage of L ake O jibway. AMS radiocarbon dating of ostracods extracted from the drainage bed also documents an important hardwater effect within the O jibway basin.