Capítulo de livro

An outline of North American deglaciation with emphasis on central and northern Canada

2004; Elsevier BV; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/s1571-0866(04)80209-4

ISSN

2212-1161

Autores

Arthur S. Dyke,

Tópico(s)

Climate change and permafrost

Resumo

This chapter reviews that the Late Wisconsinan North American ice sheet complex consisted of three major ice sheets: (1) the Laurentide Ice Sheet, which was centred on the Canadian Shield, but also expanded across the Interior Plains to the west and south, (2) the Cordilleran Ice Sheet, which inundated the western mountain belt between the northernmost co-terminus United States and Beringia, and (3) the Innuitian Ice Sheet, which covered most of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago north of about 7°N latitude. The ice cover over Newfoundland and the Maritime Provinces of Canada is usually referred to as the Appalachian Ice Complex, because ice flowed out from local centres rather than from the Canadian Shield. All of the peripheral ice sheets were confluent at the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) with the Laurentide Ice Sheet, and the Greenland Ice Sheet was confluent with the Innuitian Ice Sheet. The nucleus of this complex, the Laurentide, comprised three major sectors, the Labrador Sector, the Keewatin Sector, and the Baffin Sector, named for areas of inception mid probable areas of outflow at LGM and located respectively east, west and north of Hudson Bay. The chapter presents revised maps of North American deglaciation at 500-year and finer resolution. These maps represent an updating of a series prepared nearly two decades ago for the INQUA 1987 Congress.

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