SEDIMENT SOURCE AND HYDROCLIMATIC INFERENCES FROM GLACIAL LAKE-SEDIMENTS - THE POSTGLACIAL SEDIMENTARY RECORD OF LILLOOET LAKE, BRITISH-COLUMBIA

Citation
Jr. Desloges et R. Gilbert, SEDIMENT SOURCE AND HYDROCLIMATIC INFERENCES FROM GLACIAL LAKE-SEDIMENTS - THE POSTGLACIAL SEDIMENTARY RECORD OF LILLOOET LAKE, BRITISH-COLUMBIA, Journal of hydrology, 159(1-4), 1994, pp. 375-393
Citations number
26
Categorie Soggetti
Engineering, Civil","Water Resources","Geosciences, Interdisciplinary
Journal title
ISSN journal
00221694
Volume
159
Issue
1-4
Year of publication
1994
Pages
375 - 393
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-1694(1994)159:1-4<375:SSAHIF>2.0.ZU;2-H
Abstract
Lillooet River drains 3850 km2 of partly glacier-covered terrain befor e entering Lillooet Lake in the southern Coast Mountains of British Co lumbia. The elongated lake covers an area of 21 km 2 and forms a deep basin with water depths to 137 m. Acoustic profiling of the subbottom and sampling of the surface sediments reveals that total sediment thic kness varies from 30 + m in the north half of the lake near Lillooet d elta and then declines to less than 16 m in the south. Up-valley ice r etreat approximately 11 000 years BP resulted in conformable sediments in the main lake indicative of turbidity currents off Lillooet delta which infilled and flattened the underlying surface. A sill which sepa rates the main and south basins prevents the down-lake progression of turbidity currents resulting in conformable deposits indicative of rai n-out (i.e. settling) processes only. A major acoustic reflector at ab out 6-9 m below the modern sediment surface is associated with a well- dated volcanic eruption and sediment yield event in the upper basin at 2400 years BP. Modem glaciolacustrine deposition forms varves which a ccumulate at a rate of up to 28 mm year-1 in the north and decline to less than 0.9 mm year-1 in the south. The occurrence of two sediment-r unoff regimes, one average and the other extreme leads to distinct dif ferences in varve sedimentology and varve thickness. De-coupling the t wo signals using sedimentary evidence alone cannot be done consistentl y so a sediment yield-runoff relation for the lake (r2 = 41%) contains considerable 'noise'. An annual sediment accumulation chronology cove ring the last 125 years shows a much higher frequency of 'extreme' run off-sediment yield events during the post-1940 interval. This parallel s a documented change in climate of the region after 1945 and suggests that a longer varve chronology would provide a good, high-resolution, proxy record of hydroclimatic variations.