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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2015-04-09
    Description: Franklin Glacier is an 18-km-long valley glacier that originates in a broad icefield below the west face of Mt. Waddington in the central British Columbia Coast Mountains, Canada. Radiocarbon-dated wood samples from the proximal faces of lateral moraines flanking Franklin Glacier show that the glacier expanded at least nine times since 13,000 cal. yr BP. A probable Younger Dryas advance of Franklin Glacier at 12,910–12,690 cal. yr BP followed the late glacial retreat and down wasting of the Cordilleran Ice Sheet from ca. 16,000 to 12,900 cal. yr BP. During the succeeding early Holocene warm period, Franklin Glacier appears to have retreated significantly, leaving no record of glacial expansion until the mid-Holocene when it repeatedly advanced at 6360–6280, 5470–5280 and 4770–4580 cal. yr BP. Down wasting of the glacier surface after ca. 4770–4580 cal. yr BP was followed by intervals of expansion at 4260–4080, 3210–3020 and 2620–2380 cal. yr BP. Following ice expansion at ca. 2620–2380 cal. yr BP into trees over 224 years in age, there is no record of the glacier activity until 1570–1480 cal. yr BP when Franklin Glacier thickened and advanced into young subalpine fir trees. During the ‘Little Ice Age’, advances at 800–680, 610–560 and 570–510 cal. yr BP preceded a mid-19th to early 20th century advance that saw Franklin Glacier attain its maximum Holocene extent. The dendroglaciological record at Franklin Glacier is among the most comprehensive recovered from the British Columbia Coast Mountains and showcases the complexity of mid- to late Holocene glacier expansion in the region.
    Print ISSN: 0959-6836
    Electronic ISSN: 1477-0911
    Topics: Geography , Geosciences
    Published by Sage
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2012-08-21
    Description: The mid-Holocene behaviour of five glaciers in the British Columbia Coast Mountains was reconstructed from radiocarbon ages and stratigraphic analysis. Subfossil wood evidence at Canoe, Fyles, Jacobsen, Tchaikazan and Icemaker glaciers suggests these glaciers were expanding into standing forests prior to 6630, 4900 and 4200 cal. yr BP. Stratigraphically constrained woody detritus at Fyles Glacier records the progradational history of a Gilbert-type delta forming in response to glacial expansion between 7020 and 5470 cal. yr BP. This research provides the first evidence for mid-Holocene glacial expansion in the central and northern British Columbia Coast Mountains. Proxy records describing mid-Holocene climates in the British Columbia Coast Mountains indicate a trend towards slightly cooler and possibly wetter conditions than present. Glacial expansion occurring between 7500 and 4000 cal. yr BP has regional correlatives, suggesting coherent broad-scale climate forcing mechanisms influenced glacial mass balance at this time.
    Print ISSN: 0959-6836
    Electronic ISSN: 1477-0911
    Topics: Geography , Geosciences
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2012-08-21
    Description: Holocene glacier activity in the northern British Columbia Coast Mountains, Canada, is described following investigations in the recently deglaciated forefields of White and South Flat glaciers spilling from the Cambria Icefield. Glacially overridden stumps and detrital wood was radiocarbon and dendrochronologically dated to describe an advance between ad 250 and 650. Expansion and thickening of White Glacier by ad 765 resulted in creation of an ice-dammed lake in South Flat valley that persisted until ad 1080. Following this the lake drained, before refilling in the early ‘Little Ice Age’ prior to ad 1300. Shortly thereafter White and South Flat glaciers became confluent and flowed over the valley side toward White Lake. The characteristics of the site and the preservation of 1500 yr old deposits indicate that the two glaciers remained confluent throughout the remainder of the ‘Little Ice Age’, only separating following terminal retreat early in the 20th century. The late-Holocene glacial history of White and South Flat glaciers appears synchronous with those of other glaciers in northern portion of Pacific Northwest.
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    Electronic ISSN: 1477-0911
    Topics: Geography , Geosciences
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2012-12-21
    Description: Dendroglaciological investigations near Mt. Waddington in the central British Columbia Coast Mountains provide an enhanced perspective of Holocene glacial activity. Field investigations at Confederation, Franklin, and Jambeau glaciers led to the discovery of subfossil wood mats encased in glacial deposits and glacially sheared stumps buried beneath till. Radiocarbon-dated wood collected from valley-bottom and lateral moraine sites at Confederation Glacier suggest that an early-Holocene advance occurred at c . 5665 cal. yr BP, followed by succeeding intervals of glacier expansion at c . 3700 and 3500 cal. yr BP. At Jambeau Glacier detrital wood mats buried close to the contemporary lateral moraine crests document glacier expansion at c . 3000 cal. yr BP. Detrital subfossil wood buried in lateral moraines at the confluence of Confederation and Franklin glaciers records distinct episodes of ‘Little Ice Age’ glacier expansion as early as c . 1212 cal. yr ad , and suggests the glacier surface continued to thicken until at least c . 1330–1410 cal. yr ad. An interval of downwasting and retreat followed, before late ‘Little Ice Age’ advances such as those at Jambeau Glacier were overwhelming valley-bottom forests by c . 1740 cal. yr ad. With the exception of the previously unrecognized advance of Confederation Glacier at c . 3700 cal. yr BP, our dendroglaciological findings corroborate the emerging record of Holocene glacier activity in the British Columbia Coast Mountains.
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    Electronic ISSN: 1477-0911
    Topics: Geography , Geosciences
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2013-04-19
    Description: Climate and glacier mass balance trends from 1780 to present within the Columbia Mountains, British Columbia, Canada, were investigated using tree-ring data. Annually resolved ring width, maximum density and maximum cell wall thickness chronologies were constructed from increment core samples of Engelmann spruce ( Picea engelmannii ), mountain hemlock ( Tsuga mertensiana ) and subalpine fir ( Abies lasiocarpa ) trees collected in Glacier and Revelstoke national parks. Proxy records of maximum June–August temperature, August precipitation and February snowpack provide insight into long-term seasonal climate changes. The intervals 1790–1810, 1850–1870 and 1930–1950 were characterized by warm summer temperatures. While overall August precipitation totals decrease over the period of record, the late 1700s, 1805–1835, the 1880s, 1960–1975 and the mid 1980s were notably wetter. February snowpacks have generally decreased in depth since 1873. The reconstructed winter, summer and net mass balance records indicate that glacier cover in the Columbia Mountains has varied primarily in response to decreased snowfall since the mid 1700s. Intervals of terminus advance and retreat were shown to reflect glaciological responses to relatively short-duration variations in summer temperature and winter snowfall. The rate of cumulative mass balance decline within the last 30 years exceeds that observed at any time over the last 250 years.
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    Electronic ISSN: 1477-0911
    Topics: Geography , Geosciences
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