TY - JOUR
T1 - Evidence for a late glacial advance near the beginning of the Younger Dryas in western New York State
T2 - An event postdating the record for local Laurentide ice sheet recession
AU - Young, Richard A.
AU - Gordon, Lee M.
AU - Owen, Lewis A.
AU - Huot, Sebastien
AU - Zerfas, Timothy D.
N1 - Funding Information:
Numerous individuals were tangentially involved in the diverse ECS (2018) studies at the WNYNSC site between 2014 and 2016. The main scientists who comprised the formal ECS “Erosion Working Group” for the various components of the project are (alphabetically): Sean J. Bennett (SUNY, Buffalo), Sandra G. Doty (Consulting Geological Engineer), Robert H. Fakundiny (New York State Geologist, Emeritus), Gregory E. Tucker (University of Colorado), Michael P. Wilson (SUNY Fredonia, Emeritus), and Richard A. Young (SUNY Geneseo, Emeritus). Geology student and field assistants for Young and Wilson during the onsite fieldwork were: David Butzer, Alex de Silva, Zakkary Hess, and Eraklis Hristodoulou. Timothy Zerfas doubled as senior geologic field assistant and ECS staff member for miscellaneous logistics and offsite excavations. M.P. Wilson shared jointly in the collection of 14C samples and stratigraphic analysis at the WNYNSC site. Contributions of the other Erosion Working Group scientists to the companion studies are detailed in the final report (ECS, 2018). Appreciation is extended to Michael Wolff, ECS Study Area Manager, and Daniel Feldman, who served as the ECS onsite logistics manager. Acknowledgment is extended to John Ridge, Andrew Kozlowski, William Kappel, Shanaka de Silva and two anonymous reviewers for critical reviews of submitted drafts of the manuscript. Michael Lewis and Serge Occhietti provided useful suggestions during preparation of earlier drafts. An extended discussion relating to the identification of glacial tills at the critical sites in this investigation is provided as a Supplemental File1 to eliminate any concerns that the exposures might be landslide debris as opposed to primary glacial till. The supplement also speculates as to why the advance in western New York State may not have been obvious in the extensive research published for the St. Lawrence Valley.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 The Authors
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - Widespread evidence of an unrecognized late glacial advance across preexisting moraines in western New York is confirmed by 40 14C ages and six new optically stimulated luminescence analyses between the Genesee Valleyand the Cattaraugus Creek basin of eastern Lake Erie. The Late Wisconsin chronology is relatively unconstrained by local dating of moraines between Pennsylvania and Lake Ontario. Few published 14C ages record discrete events, unlike evidence in the upper Great Lakes and New England. The new 14C ages from wood in glacial tills along Buttermilk Creek south of Springville, New York, and reevaluation of numerous 14C ages from miscellaneous investigations in the Genesee Valley document a significant glacial advance into Cattaraugus and Livingston Counties between 13,000 and 13,300 cal yr B.P., near the Greenland Interstadial 1b (GI-1b) cooling leading into the transition from the Bölling-Alleröd to the Younger Dryas. The chronology from four widely distributed sites indicates that a Late Wisconsin advance spread till discontinuously over the surface, without significantly modifying the preexisting glacial topography. A short-lived advance by a partially grounded ice shelf best explains the evidence. The advance, ending 43 km south of Rochester and a similar distance south of Buffalo, overlaps the revised chronology for glacial Lake Iroquois, now considered to extend from ca. 14,800-13,000 cal yr B.P. The spread of the radiocarbon ages is similar to the well-known Two Creeks Forest Bed, which equates the event with the Two Rivers advance in Wisconsin.
AB - Widespread evidence of an unrecognized late glacial advance across preexisting moraines in western New York is confirmed by 40 14C ages and six new optically stimulated luminescence analyses between the Genesee Valleyand the Cattaraugus Creek basin of eastern Lake Erie. The Late Wisconsin chronology is relatively unconstrained by local dating of moraines between Pennsylvania and Lake Ontario. Few published 14C ages record discrete events, unlike evidence in the upper Great Lakes and New England. The new 14C ages from wood in glacial tills along Buttermilk Creek south of Springville, New York, and reevaluation of numerous 14C ages from miscellaneous investigations in the Genesee Valley document a significant glacial advance into Cattaraugus and Livingston Counties between 13,000 and 13,300 cal yr B.P., near the Greenland Interstadial 1b (GI-1b) cooling leading into the transition from the Bölling-Alleröd to the Younger Dryas. The chronology from four widely distributed sites indicates that a Late Wisconsin advance spread till discontinuously over the surface, without significantly modifying the preexisting glacial topography. A short-lived advance by a partially grounded ice shelf best explains the evidence. The advance, ending 43 km south of Rochester and a similar distance south of Buffalo, overlaps the revised chronology for glacial Lake Iroquois, now considered to extend from ca. 14,800-13,000 cal yr B.P. The spread of the radiocarbon ages is similar to the well-known Two Creeks Forest Bed, which equates the event with the Two Rivers advance in Wisconsin.
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U2 - 10.1130/GES02257.1
DO - 10.1130/GES02257.1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85097654320
VL - 17
SP - 1
EP - 35
JO - Geosphere
JF - Geosphere
SN - 1553-040X
ER -