Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-gtxcr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-18T17:45:13.671Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Eolian sand and loess deposits indicate west-northwest paleowinds during the Late Pleistocene in western Wisconsin, USA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 October 2017

Randall J. Schaetzl*
Affiliation:
Department of Geography, Environment, and Spatial Sciences, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48823, USA
Phillip H. Larson
Affiliation:
Department of Geography, AGES Research Laboratory, Minnesota State University, Mankato, Minnesota 56001, USA
Douglas J. Faulkner
Affiliation:
Department of Geography and Anthropology, University of Wisconsin–Eau Claire, Eau Claire, Wisconsin 54701, USA
Garry L. Running
Affiliation:
Department of Geography and Anthropology, University of Wisconsin–Eau Claire, Eau Claire, Wisconsin 54701, USA
Harry M. Jol
Affiliation:
Department of Geography and Anthropology, University of Wisconsin–Eau Claire, Eau Claire, Wisconsin 54701, USA
Tammy M. Rittenour
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, Luminescence Laboratory, Utah State University, Logan, Utah 84322, USA
*
*Corresponding author at: Department of Geography, Environment, and Spatial Sciences, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48823, USA. E-mail address: soils@msu.edu (R.J. Schaetzl).

Abstract

Our study adds to the Quaternary history of eolian systems and deposits in western Wisconsin, USA, primarily within the lower Chippewa River valley. Thickness and textural patterns of loess deposits in the region indicate transport by west-northwesterly and westerly winds. Loess is thickest and coarsest on the southeastern flanks of large bedrock ridges and uplands, similar in some ways to shadow dunes. In many areas, sand was transported up and onto the western flanks of bedrock ridges as sand ramps, presumably as loess was deposited in their lee. Long, linear dunes, common on the sandy lowlands of the Chippewa valley, also trend to the east-southeast. Small depressional blowouts are widespread here as well and often lie immediately upwind of small parabolic dunes. Finally, in areas where sediment was being exposed by erosion along cutbanks of the Chippewa River, sand appears to have been transported up and onto the terrace treads, forming cliff-top dunes. Luminescence data indicate that this activity has continued throughout the latest Pleistocene and into the mid-Holocene. Together, these landforms and sediments paint a picture of a locally destabilized landscape with widespread eolian activity throughout much of the postglacial period.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Washington. Published by Cambridge University Press, 2017 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Aitken, M.J., 1998. An Introduction to Optical Dating: The Dating of Quaternary Sediments by the Use of Photon-Stimulated Luminescence. Oxford University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Anderton, J.B., Loope, W.L., 1995. Buried soils in a perched dunefield as indicators of late Holocene lake-level change in the Lake Superior basin. Quaternary Research 44, 190199.Google Scholar
Andrews, G.W., 1965. Late Quaternary geologic history of the lower Chippewa valley, Wisconsin. Geological Society of America Bulletin 76, 113124.Google Scholar
Arbogast, A.F., 2000. Estimating the time since final stabilization of a perched dune field along Lake Superior. Professional Geographer 52, 594606.Google Scholar
Arbogast, A.F., Luehmann, M.D., Miller, B.A., Wernette, P.A., Adams, K.M., Waha, J.D., O'Neil, G.A., Tang, Y., Boothroyd, J.J., Babcock, C.R., Hanson, P.R., Young, A.R., 2015. Late-Pleistocene paleowinds and aeolian sand mobilization in north-central Lower Michigan. Aeolian Research 16, 109116.Google Scholar
Arbogast, A.F., Luehmann, M.D., Monaghan, W.G., Lovis, W.A., Wang, H., 2017. Paleoenvironmental and geomorphic significance of bluff-top dunes along the Au Sable River in Northeastern Lower Michigan, USA. Geomorphology 297, 112121.Google Scholar
Attig, J.W., Bricknell, M., Carson, E.C., Clayton, L., Johnson, M.D., Mickelson, D.M., Syverson, K.M., 2011a. Glaciation of Wisconsin. 4th ed. Educational Series Publication, 36. Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey, Madison, WI.Google Scholar
Attig, J.W., Clayton, L., Mickelson, D.M., 1985. Correlation of late Wisconsin glacial phases on the western Great Lakes. Geological Society of America Bulletin 96, 15851593.2.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Attig, J.W., Hanson, P.R., Rawling, J.E. III, Young, A.R., Carson, E.C., 2011b. Optical ages indicate the southwestern margin of the Green Bay Lobe in Wisconsin, USA, was at its maximum extent until about 18,500 years ago. Geomorphology 130, 384390.Google Scholar
Baker, G.S., Jol, H.M., 2007. Stratigraphic Analyses Using GPR. Special Paper 432. Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO.Google Scholar
Baker, R.W., Diehl, J.F., Simpson, T.W., Zelazney, L.W., Beske-Diehl, S., 1983. Pre-Wisconsin glacial stratigraphy, chronology and paleomagnetics of west-central Wisconsin. Geological Society of America Bulletin 94, 14421449.Google Scholar
Bettis, E.A. III, Muhs, D.R., Roberts, H.M., Wintle, A.G., 2003. Last glacial loess in the conterminous USA. Quaternary Science Reviews 22, 19071946.Google Scholar
Bristow, C.S., 2009. Ground penetrating radar in aeolian dune sands. In: Jol, H.M. (Ed.), Ground Penetrating Radar: Theory and Applications. Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp. 273297.Google Scholar
Brown, B.A., 1988. Bedrock Geology of Wisconsin, West-Central Sheet. Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey Map Series 88-7. Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey, University of Wisconsin Extension, Madison.Google Scholar
Bryson, R.A., Wendland, W.M., 1967. Radiocarbon Isochrones of the Retreat of the Laurentide Ice Sheet. Technical Report 35. Department of Meteorology, University of Wisconsin, Madison.Google Scholar
Campbell, M.C., Fisher, T.G., Goble, R.J., 2011. Terrestrial sensitivity to abrupt cooling recorded by aeolian activity in northwest Ohio, USA. Quaternary Research 75, 411416.Google Scholar
Carson, E.C., Hanson, P.R., Attig, J.W., Young, A.R., 2012. Numeric control on the late-glacial chronology of the southern Laurentide Ice Sheet derived from ice-proximal lacustrine deposits. Quaternary Research 78, 583589.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clayton, L., Attig, J.W., Mickelson, D.M., 2001. Effects of late Pleistocene permafrost on the landscape of Wisconsin, USA. Boreas 30, 173188.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
COHMAP Members, 1988. Climatic changes of the last 18,000 years: observations and model simulations. Science 241, 10431052.Google Scholar
Colgan, P.M., Amidon, W.H., Thurkettle, S.A., 2017. Inland dunes on the abandoned bed of Glacial Lake Chicago indicate eolian activity during the Pleistocene-Holocene transition, southwestern Michigan, USA. Quaternary Research 87, 6681.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
David, P.P., 1981. Stabilized dune ridges in northern Saskatchewan. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 18, 286310.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dean, W.E., Ahlbrandt, T.S., Anderson, R.Y., Bradbury, J.P., 1996. Regional aridity in North America during the middle Holocene. Holocene 6, 145155.Google Scholar
Faulkner, D., Larson, P.H., Jol, H.M., Running, G.L., Loope, H.M., Goble, R.J., 2016. Episodic incision and terrace formation resulting from abrupt late-glacial base-level fall, lower Chippewa River, Wisconsin, USA. Geomorphology 266, 7595.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fryberger, S., Dean, G., 1979. Dune forms and wind regime. In: McKee, E.D. (Ed), Introduction to a Study of Global Sand Seas (U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1052. 137170.Google Scholar
Galbraith, R.F., Roberts, R.G., 2012. Statistical aspects of equivalent dose and error calculation and display in OSL dating: an overview and some recommendations. Quaternary Geochronology 11, 127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grigal, D.F., Severson, R.C., Goltz, G.E., 1976. Evidence of eolian activity in north-central Minnesota 8,000 to 5,000 yr ago. Geological Society of America Bulletin 87, 12511254.2.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guerin, G., Mercier, N., Adamiec, G., 2011. Dose-rate conversion factors: update. Ancient TL 29, 58.Google Scholar
Ham, N.R., Attig, J.W., 1997. Pleistocene Geology of Lincoln County, Wisconsin. Bulletin 93. Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey, University of Wisconsin Extension, Madison.Google Scholar
Hanson, P.R., Mason, J.A., Jacobs, P.M., Young, A.R., 2015. Evidence for bioturbation of luminescence signals in eolian sand on upland ridgetops, southeastern Minnesota, USA. Quaternary International 362, 108115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Havholm, K.G., Bergstrom, N.D., Jol, H.M., Running, G.L., 2003. GPR survey of a Holocene aeolian/fluvial/lacustrine succession, Lauder Sandhills, Manitoba, Canada. In Bristow, C.S., Jol, H.M. (Eds.), Ground Penetrating Radar in Sediments. Geological Society, London, Special Publications 211, 4754.Google Scholar
Hesp, P.A., 1981. The formation of shadow dunes. Journal of Sedimentological Research 51, 101111.Google Scholar
Hesp, P.A., Smyth, T.A.G., 2017. Nebkha flow dynamics and shadow dune formation. Geomorphology 282, 2738.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hobbs, W.H., 1943. The glacial anticyclone and the continental glaciers of North America. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 86, 368402.Google Scholar
Hole, F.D., 1976. Soils of Wisconsin. University of Wisconsin Press, Madison.Google Scholar
Jakel, D.E., Dahl, R.A., 1989. Soil Survey of Chippewa County, Wisconsin. Soil Conservation Service, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Jennings, J.N., 1967. Cliff-top dunes. Geographical Research 5, 4049.Google Scholar
Johnson, M.D., 1986. Pleistocene Geology of Barron County, Wisconsin. Information Circular 55. Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey, Madison, WI.Google Scholar
Jol, H.M., 2009. Ground Penetrating Radar: Theory and Applications. Elsevier, Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Jol, H.M., Bristow, C.S., 2003. GPR in sediments: advice on data collection, basic processing and interpretation, a good practice guide. In: Bristow, C.S., Jol, H.M. (Eds.), Ground Penetrating Radar in Sediments. Geological Society, London, Special Publications 211, 927.Google Scholar
Jol, H.M., Bristow, C.S., Smith, D.G., Junck, M.B., Putnam, P., 2003. Stratigraphic imaging of the Navajo Sandstone using ground-penetrating radar. Leading Edge 22, 882887.Google Scholar
Kasse, C., 1997. Cold-climate aeolian sand-sheet formation in north-western Europe (c. 14–12.4 ka): a response to permafrost degradation and increased aridity. Permafrost and Periglacial Processes 8, 295311.3.0.CO;2-0>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keen, K.L., Shane, L.C.K., 1990. A continuous record of Holocene eolian activity and vegetation change at Lake Ann, east-central Minnesota. Geological Society of America Bulletin 102, 16461657.Google Scholar
Kilibarda, Z., Blockland, J., 2011. Morphology and origin of the Fair Oaks Dunes in NW Indiana, USA. Geomorphology 125, 305318.Google Scholar
Knox, J.C., Bartlein, P.J., Webb, T. III, Clayton, L., Frolking, T.A., Hole, F.D., Attig, J.W., et al. 1982. Quaternary History of the Driftless Area with Special Papers. Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey, Madison, WI.Google Scholar
Koster, E.A., 1988. Ancient and modern cold-climate aeolian sand deposition: a review. Journal of Quaternary Science 3, 6983.Google Scholar
Krist, F., Schaetzl, R.J., 2001. Paleowind (11,000 BP) directions derived from lake spits in northern Michigan. Geomorphology 38, 118.Google Scholar
Lancaster, N., 1982. Linear dunes. Progress in Physical Geography 6, 475504.Google Scholar
Lancaster, N., 2009. Dune morphology and dynamics. In: Parsons, A., Abrahams, A.D. (Eds.), Geomorphology of Desert Environments. Springer, New York, pp. 557595.Google Scholar
Larson, P.H., Dryer, W.P., Mc Donald, J., Baker, A., Running, G.L., Faulkner, D.J., Jol, H.M., 2008. Geomorphology of cliff-top parabolic dunes within the Lower Chippewa River Valley, Upper Putnam Park, Eau Claire, Wisconsin. Abstracts with Programs, Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Boston, MA.Google Scholar
Leigh, D.S., Knox, J.C., 1993. AMS radiocarbon age of the Upper Mississippi Valley Roxana Silt. Quaternary Research 39, 282289.Google Scholar
Livingstone, I., Warren, A., 1996. Aeolian Geomorphology: An Introduction. Longman, Singapore.Google Scholar
Loope, W.L., Fisher, T.G., Jol, H.M., Goble, R.J., Anderton, J.B., Blewett, W.L., 2004. A Holocene history of dune-mediated landscape change along the southeastern shore of Lake Superior. Geomorphology 61, 303322.Google Scholar
Luehmann, M.D., Schaetzl, R.J., Miller, B.A., Bigsby, M., 2013. Thin, pedoturbated and locally sourced loess in the western Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Aeolian. Research 8, 85100.Google Scholar
Mason, J.A., 2015. Up in the refrigerator: geomorphic response to periglacial environments in the Upper Mississippi River basin, USA. Geomorphology 248, 363381.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mason, J.A., Nater, E.A., Zanner, C.W., Bell, J.C., 1999. A new model of topographic effects on the distribution of loess. Geomorphology 28, 223236.Google Scholar
McSweeney, K., Leigh, D.S., Knox, J.C., Darmody, R.H., 1988. Micromorphological analysis of mixed zones associated with loess deposits of the midcontinental United States. In: Eden, D.N., Furkert, R.J. (Eds.), Loess: Its Distribution, Geology and Soils. Proceedings of the International Symposium on Loess, New Zealand. A.A. Balkema, Rotterdam, the Netherlands, pp. 117130.Google Scholar
Meyer, T.A., 2002. Soil Survey of Pepin County, Wisconsin. Subset of MLRA 105. Natural Resources Conservation Service, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Meyer, T.A., 2004. Soil Survey of Dunn County, Wisconsin. Subset of MLRA 105. Natural Resources Conservation Service, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Mickelson, D.M., Clayton, L., Fullerton, D.S., Borns, H.W., 1983. The Late Wisconsin glacial record of the Laurentide Ice Sheet in the United States. In: Wright, H.E., Jr. (Ed.), Late Quaternary Environments of the United States Vol. 1, The Late Pleistocene. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis pp. 337.Google Scholar
Miller, B.A., Schaetzl, R.J., 2012. Precision of soil particle size analysis using laser diffractometry. Soil Science Society of America Journal 76, 17191727.Google Scholar
Murray, A.S., Wintle, A.G., 2000. Luminescence dating of quartz using an improved single aliquot regenerative-dose protocol. Radiation Measurements 32, 5773.Google Scholar
Murray, A.S., Wintle, A.G., 2003. The single aliquot regenerative dose protocol: potential for improvements in reliability. Radiation Measurements 37, 377381.Google Scholar
Olson, L.M., Larson, P.H., Hupy, J., Jol, H.M., Faulkner, D.J., Running, G.L., 2008. Late Quaternary eolian dunes and fluvial terraces of the lower Chippewa River valley. Abstracts with Programs, Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Boston, MA.Google Scholar
Ostrom, M.E., 1970. Lithologic Cycles in Lower Paleozoic Rocks of Western Wisconsin. Field Trip Guidebook for Cambrian-Ordovician Geology of Western Wisconsin. Information Circular No. 11. Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey, Madison, WI.Google Scholar
Prescott, J.R., Hutton, J.T., 1994. Cosmic ray contributions to dose rates for luminescence and ESR dating. Radiation Measurements 23, 497500.Google Scholar
Rawling, J.E. III, Hanson, P.R., Young, A.R., Attig, J.W., 2008. Late Pleistocene dune construction in the central sand plain of Wisconsin, USA. Geomorphology 100, 494505.Google Scholar
Rittenour, T.M., Blum, M.D., Goble, R.J., 2007. Fluvial evolution of the lower Mississippi River valley during the last 100-kyr glacial cycle: Response to glaciation and sea-level change. Geological Society of America Bulletin 119, 586608.Google Scholar
Ritter, D.F., Kochel, R.C., Miller, J.R., 2002. Process Geomorphology. Waveland Press, Long Grove, IL.Google Scholar
Rubin, D.M., Hesp, P.A., 2009. Multiple origins of linear dunes on Earth and Titan. Nature Geoscience 2, 653658.Google Scholar
Saye, S.E., Pye, K., Clemmensen, L.B., 2006. Development of a cliff-top dune indicated by particle size and geochemical characteristics: Rubjerg Knude, Denmark. Sedimentology 53, 121.Google Scholar
Schaetzl, R.J., 2012. Comment on: Mississippi Valley regional source of loess on the southern Green Bay Lobe land surface, Wisconsin (Quaternary Research 75:574-583, 2011). Quaternary Research 78, 149151.Google Scholar
Schaetzl, R.J., Attig, J.W., 2013. The loess cover of northeastern Wisconsin. Quaternary Research 79, 199214.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schaetzl, R.J., Forman, S.L., Attig, J.W., 2014. Optical ages on loess derived from outwash surfaces constrain the advance of the Laurentide Ice Sheet out of the Lake Superior basin, USA. Quaternary Research 81, 318329.Google Scholar
Schaetzl, R.J., Krist, F.J. Jr., Luehmann, M.D., Lewis, C.F.M., Michalek, M.J., 2016. Spits formed in Glacial Lake Algonquin indicate strong easterly winds over the Laurentide Great Lakes during Late Pleistocene. Journal of Paleolimnology 55, 4965.Google Scholar
Schaetzl, R.J., Loope, W.L., 2008. Evidence for an eolian origin for the silt enriched soil mantles on the glaciated uplands of eastern Upper Michigan, USA. Geomorphology 100, 285295.Google Scholar
Schaetzl, R.J., Luehmann, M.D., 2013. Coarse-textured basal zones in thin loess deposits: Products of sediment mixing and/or paleoenvironmental change? Geoderma 192, 277285.Google Scholar
Scull, P., Schaetzl, R.J., 2011. Using PCA to characterize and differentiate the character of loess deposits in Wisconsin and Upper Michigan, USA. Geomorphology 127, 143155.Google Scholar
Stanley, K.E., Schaetzl, R.J., 2011. Characteristics and paleoenvironmental significance of a thin, dual-sourced loess sheet, north-central Wisconsin. Aeolian Research 2, 241251.Google Scholar
Syverson, K.M., 2007. Pleistocene Geology of Chippewa County, Wisconsin. Bulletin 103. Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey, Madison, WI.Google Scholar
Syverson, K.M., Colgan, P.M., 2004. The Quaternary of Wisconsin: a review of stratigraphy and glaciation history. In: Ehlers, J., Gibbard, P.L. (Eds.), Quaternary Glaciations: Extent and Chronology. Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp. 295311.Google Scholar
Thomas, D.D., 1977. Soil Survey of Eau Claire County, Wisconsin. Soil Conservation Service, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Tsoar, H., 1989. Linear dunes – forms and formation. Progress in Physical Geography 13, 507528.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vader, M.J., Zeman, B.K., Schaetzl, R.J., Anderson, K.L., Walquist, R.W., Freiberger, K.M., Emmendorfer, J.A., Wang, H., 2012. Proxy evidence for easterly winds in Glacial Lake Algonquin, from the Black River Delta in northern Lower Michigan. Physical Geography 33, 252268.Google Scholar
Weidman, S., 1911. Reconnaissance Soil Survey of Part of North Western Wisconsin. Bulletin 23. Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey, Madison, WI.Google Scholar
Wing, G.N., Murray, A.S., 1975. Soil Survey of Dunn County, Wisconsin. Soil Conservation Service, U.S. Govt. Printing Office, Washington, DC. Google Scholar
Wintle, A.G., Murray, A.S., 2006. A review of quartz optically stimulated luminescence characteristics and their relevance in single-aliquot regenerative protocols. Radiation Measurements 41, 369391.Google Scholar