Mathewes, Rolf W. (2002): Late-Pleistocene outburst flooding recorded by reworked Tertiary pollen in southwestern British Columbia, Canada

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 169S
Identifier:
2003-037139
georefid

Creator:
Mathewes, Rolf W.
Simon Fraser University, Department of Biological Sciences, Burnaby, BC, Canada
author

Identification:
Late-Pleistocene outburst flooding recorded by reworked Tertiary pollen in southwestern British Columbia, Canada
2002
In: Anonymous, Abstracts of the proceedings of the Thirty-fourth annual meeting of the American Association of Stratigraphic Palynologists
American Association of Stratigraphic Palynologists, Dallas, TX, United States
26
269
Saanich Inlet on southern Vancouver Island is a deep near-shore marine basin with anoxic bottom waters and sediments that preserve a detailed record of postglacial marine and terrestrial environments. Cores collected by ODP Leg 169S reveal a massive, silty clay unit 40-50 cm thick, radiocarbon dated between 10,100-10,500 years old. This deposit is marked by a very sharp lower contact with laminated sediments, and an abundance of reworked Tertiary palynomorphs. Deposition of this unit has been interpreted as resulting from massive floodwater discharges caused by the collapse of glacial dams in the Fraser River drainage of mainland British Columbia. A mainland source of sediment is postulated by clay mineralogy, and the Fraser River source is defined by palynology, which matches the Tertiary pollen in the clay layer to sedimentary rocks of the Fraser Lowland near Vancouver. The upper Paleocene to lower Oligocene Huntingdon Formation (including former Kitsilano and Burrard Formations) is the most likely source for most of the microfossils, which include Carya, Pterocarya, Juglans, Ulmus, Fagus, Tilia, Intratriporopollenites, Osmunda, and other pollen and spores. Some contributions from the Miocene Boundary Bay Formation are also likely, based mainly on abundant Cedrus-type pollen. The erosion of Fraser Lowland bedrock by massive floodwaters of glacial origin, followed by transport across southern Georgia Strait in a sediment plume, is the best explanation for the "flood clay deposit" and its enclosed Tertiary palynomorphs in Saanich Inlet.
English
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:48.3800
West:-123.3015East: -123.3000
South:48.3500

Stratigraphy; absolute age; British Columbia; Burrard Formation; C-14; Canada; carbon; Cenozoic; clastic sediments; clay; cores; dates; discharge; erosion; floods; fluvial environment; Fraser River; glacial environment; glaciation; glaciofluvial environment; Huntingdon Formation; isotopes; jokulhlaups; Kitsilano Formation; laminations; Leg 169S; marine sediments; microfossils; miospores; Ocean Drilling Program; palynomorphs; planar bedding structures; Pleistocene; pollen; Quaternary; radioactive isotopes; reworking; Saanich Inlet; sedimentary structures; sediments; southwestern British Columbia; Tertiary; upper Pleistocene; water erosion; Western Canada;

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