The Mirdan Canal section in central Nebraska, USA, provides evidence for mu
ltiple episodes of Holocene loess deposition in the central Great Plains. T
his irrigation canal cut exposes more than 4 m of Holocene sediment that ov
erlies the late Wisconsinan Peoria Loess. The oldest Holocene sediment is l
ocal slopewash that fills gullies, but overlying beds are interpreted as Ho
locene loess (Bignell Loess). Three buried soil profiles occur within the H
olocene sediment, and have yielded uncalibrated C-14 ages of 3010 yr BP (up
permost buried soil) and 8790 yr BP (third buried soil from top). A fourth
buried soil yielded an age of 9330 yr BP, and is correlated with the Brady
Soil. The Bignell Loess has a darker color? slightly more organic matter, m
ore clay, more coarse silt and sand, less smectite, and less volcanic glass
than the underlying Peoria Loess. The Bignell Loess is most plausibly inte
rpreted as dust from local flood plains, containing a mixture of reworked P
eoria Loess and older silts with contrasting mineralogy. Episodes of loess
deposition occurred in the early, middle and late Holocene, probably during
periods of dry climate but possibly also as a consequence of large erosive
floods that made wind-erodible sediment available on nearby flood plains.
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