TIMING AND SOURCES OF ABRUPT GLACIAL EVENTS ON THE LABRADOR SHELF
The age model of this 21.15 m long core is based on 18 calibrated radiocarbon dates on mollusks and foraminifers. Carbonate and mass magnetic susceptibility (MMS) were measured on average at a 30 yr time resolution. There are six pronounced high carbonate spikes (>30%) in MD99-2236. Each spike corresponds to a relative MMS low. Age estimates of these peaks are: 11.5, 10.6, 9.5, 9.1, 8.7, and 8.2 cal kyr BP. The duration of the carbonate peaks ranges between 50 and 200 years. The 11.5 cal ka spike (end of Younger Dryas chron) corresponds to an 18-O depletion in benthic foraminifera; the full 18-O record is in progress. The carbonate spikes at 11.5 cal ka and a pronounced peak at 8.2 cal ka were not resolved in earlier research in Cartwright Saddle.
A red bed' associated with a carbonate spike lies between 570 and 620 cm depth, ca. 8.57 cal ka, in the core; very close to the estimated age of the timing of the final outburst drainage of lakes Agassiz and Ojibway: ca. 8.47 cal ka BP. Bulk mineralogy, by X-ray diffraction, is tested on samples from the red bed' of core MD99-2236, and the red beds' of upstream sites in Hudson Strait (90023-045; 90023-101; AMD0509-28PC) and Hudson Bay (AMD0509-27bLEH), and samples of red Labrador and Keewatin (Dubawnt Group of northern Hudson Bay) tills. Estimations of the weight % of clay and non-clay minerals from the XRD are compared to help determine a potential source for the red bed' sediments in MD99-2236.