Cordilleran Section - 103rd Annual Meeting (4–6 May 2007)

Paper No. 4
Presentation Time: 2:10 PM

COSMOGENIC-NUCLIDE AGES FROM THE OKANOGAN LOBE OF THE CORDILLERAN ICE SHEET AND ASSOCIATED OUTBURST FLOOD ERRATICS


BROOKS, Justin M., Geology, Western Washington Univ, 516 High Street, MS 9080, Bellingham, WA 98225 and CRIDER, Juliet G., Geology, Western Washington University, 516 High Street, Bellingham, WA 98225, brooksj4@cc.wwu.edu

Cosmogenic-nuclide exposure ages from 12 erratics within the Columbia River and Lake Chelan valleys, central Washington State, place new constraints on local late Pleistocene glaciogenic events. Eight Be-10 ages from end and lateral moraine erratics of the Okanogan Lobe indicate it was at or near maximum by 14,500±200 Be10 yr B.P. While this agrees with Atwater's (1986, 1987) inferred Okanogan Lobe maximum of 14,800±375 yr B.P. based varve counts and a C-14 date in sediments of the Sandpoil Arm of Glacial Lake Columbia, it is several thousand years younger than six Cl-36 ages from glacial erratics of the Withrow Moraine on the neighboring Waterville Plateau (Swanson and Caffee, 2001).

Four Be-10 exposure ages from outburst flood erratics within the Columbia River Valley indicate the last flood to pass between Pateros and Wenatchee occurred 10,800±500 Be10 yr B.P. This is significantly younger than Atwater's (1986) inferred retreat of the Okanogan Lobe north of the Columbia River at 13,050±650 yr B.P. If this flood cannot represent the final Okanogan Outburst Flood, then it must describe a large, late jökulhlaup from a far retreated Okanogan Lobe.