GEOPHYSICAL ANALYSIS OF LACUSTRINE ENVIRONMENTS FOR DETERMINING ARCTIC WARMTH
The focus of the research is Lake CF8--a small lake in the Canadian Arctic (Baffin Island) overrun by a non-erosive of the Laurentide Ice Sheet--that contains intact lake sediments from at least three complete interglacial periods. Ground penetrating radar (GPR) was utilized in 2005 and 2007 while CF8 was still covered in ice, making collection of data advantageous. Imaging with the GPR was predominantly obtained using 100 MHz GPR antennas integrated with a real-time differential GPS unit. The depth of investigation was nominally 6 meters with good resolution of the subsurface, allowing interpretation of the geometry of alternating layers of low reflectivity gyttja units and high reflectivity sand units. Profile spacing was variable but collected in a grid pattern. Profiles are fenced, creating a pseudo-3D image, and the time-variant morphology of CF8 is determined. The addition of geophysics illuminates the geometric changes in the gyttja and sand units as the profiles extend away from the shoreline of the lake.