102nd Annual Meeting of the Cordilleran Section, GSA, 81st Annual Meeting of the Pacific Section, AAPG, and the Western Regional Meeting of the Alaska Section, SPE (8–10 May 2006)

Paper No. 5
Presentation Time: 2:40 PM

HOLOCENE HISTORY OF BERING GLACIER, ALASKA


CROSSEN, Kristine, Geological Sciences, University of Alaska, 3211 Providence Drive, Anchorage, AK 99508, afkjc@uaa.alaska.edu

Marine shells and in situ forests currently emerging during the post-surge retreat of Bering Glacier give evidence of non-glacial environments in the Bering Glacier Foreland during early to mid-Holocene times. Englacially transported marine shells collected behind the recent surge margin give evidence of a fully marine environment ~8-10,000 years ago in locations currently buried by the Bering Glacier. The widespread occurrence of these shells suggests that the marine embayment extended across the entire Bering Glacier Foreland (Pasch, this session). Fully marine conditions occurred in at least one location near the current ice margin until ~5,000 years ago as evidenced by in situ burrowing clams located on the Taggland Peninsula (Shennan, this session). Evidence for terrestrial conditions by ~4,000 years ago is found along the western ice margin based on the transported wood collected there. Clear indications of widespread forests are found along both the eastern and western margins of the current Bering Glacier where in situ peat deposits and forest beds indicate both non-glacial and non-marine environments existed for ~1,000 years between 200 BC and 800 AD (and possibly as late as 1200 AD along the eastern margin). Forests are both growing on and buried by sandy lacustrine sediments, suggesting fluctuating lake levels at the Ancient Forest site along Tashalich Arm. Subsequent sedimentation changes from lacustrine sands to outwash gravel indicate glacial growth and advance in the area. Along the west side of Tashalich Arm, no peat or forest beds interrupt the thick outwash sequence suggesting a fairly barren outwash environment adjacent to the ice. Although several tills are interspersed with the outwash along the eastern ice margin, no tills occur until the top of the outwash sequence along the western side of the glacier. These tills were deposited by ice advances before and during the Little Ice Age and by subsequent surge events. Wiles et al. (1991) suggest that Bering Glacier began its Little Ice Age advance during the 18th century AD.