PERMAFROST DISTRIBUTION IN PEATLANDS OF WEST-CENTRAL CANADA DURING THE HOLOCENE WARM PERIOD 6000 YEARS BP

Authors
Citation
Sc. Zoltai, PERMAFROST DISTRIBUTION IN PEATLANDS OF WEST-CENTRAL CANADA DURING THE HOLOCENE WARM PERIOD 6000 YEARS BP, Geographie physique et quaternaire, 49(1), 1995, pp. 45-54
Citations number
NO
Categorie Soggetti
Geografhy,Geology,Paleontology
ISSN journal
07057199
Volume
49
Issue
1
Year of publication
1995
Pages
45 - 54
Database
ISI
SICI code
0705-7199(1995)49:1<45:PDIPOW>2.0.ZU;2-3
Abstract
The extent and distribution of permafrost in peatlands 6000 years ago was investigated in the present discontinuous and continuous permafros t zones of west-central Canada. Permafrost peatlands were cored at 161 locations and the floristic composition of the peat was determined fr om macrofossil analysis. The reconstructed paleoenvironments were used to indicate the presence or absence of permafrost at the time of peat formation. Chronological control was provided by radiocarbon dating o f substantial changes in the peat sequences and by dates of basal peat deposits. Peatland formation began after glacial ice disappeared from the land surface of west-central Canada. Macrofossils indicate that m ost peatlands were fens without permafrost at 6 ka, except in the far north. Permafrost was already present in many areas of the Arctic, and peat accumulation occurred under permafrost conditions. In the southe rn area, permafrost development in peatlands began about 4 ka as the m iddle Holocene warm period came to a close. Permafrost development in the fens was associated with the development of a Sphagnum-dominated s urface on the fens, caused by the onset of a cooler and moister climat e. The insulation provided by the surface peat layer and by the associ ated tree cover initiated permafrost development in small lenses that coalesced into large permafrost bodies according to the prevailing cli matic conditions. At the target date, 6 ka, permafrost was present in some peatlands, but the distribution zones shifted 300 to 500 km to th e north, relative to the present zonation. It is estimated that this c orresponds to a mean annual temperature that was about 5 degrees C war mer than at present.