LATE-QUATERNARY SEDIMENTATION IN ANDROSCOGGIN LAKE AND ITS OUTLET DELTA, LEEDS/WAYNE, MAINE
A 3.5-kHz CHIRP sonar system was used to investigate sediments within the lake. Acoustic blanking caused by gas in the uppermost sediment, derived from the decomposition of organic matter, underlies ~30% of the area surveyed, especially near the delta and in the deep lake basin. In gas-free areas, an acoustically well-stratified unit up to 20 m thick, interpreted as glacial-marine sediment of the Presumpscot Formation, drapes a high-relief bedrock surface. A second unit, generally flat-lying with weak acoustic stratification, overlies glacial sediments, usually above a distinct angular unconformity. This unit is interpreted as Holocene lake deposits and is generally <3 meters thick.
Three vibracores 3-4 meters in length were taken in marshy areas of the delta, one penetrated only Holocene deposits while two contain a sharp contact with the Presumpscot Formation. Delta sediments generally comprise massive-to weakly- stratified sandy mud, with detrital and in situ organic material. Shifts to more-organic wetland deposits in the upper ~30 cm of all three cores suggest a lake-level increase, consistent with apparent shrinkage of the delta as seen with a 1912 topographic map compared to the present. This water-level rise is tentatively attributed to a pollution-control dam built on the Dead River in the 1930s. Results of ongoing sediment and metals analyses of the cores will also be presented.