Northeastern Section - 47th Annual Meeting (18–20 March 2012)

Paper No. 8
Presentation Time: 11:00 AM

NEW EVIDENCE OF A POST-LAURENTIDE LOCAL CIRQUE GLACIER ON MOUNT WASHINGTON, NEW HAMPSHIRE


DULIN, Ian T., Bates College, 315 Bates College, Lewiston, ME 04240 and FOWLER, Brian K., Mount Washington Observatory, P.O. Box 1829, Conway, NH 03818, idulin@bates.edu

As global temperatures warmed and the last North American continental ice sheet receded there were several climate reversals during which time mean temperatures in New England were significantly reduced. Decreased temperatures in combination with increased precipitation may have supported the formation or reactivation of local mountain glaciers in pre-existing cirques on Mt. Washington, New Hampshire. Evidence supporting the existence of a local cirque glacier would provide important constraints on climatic conditions during the late-glacial Holocene transition. Preliminary mapping done in the area has identified a potential terminal moraine associated with a local valley glacier in the Great Gulf, the largest cirque-like feature on Mount Washington. The presence of this feature is significant because any pre-Wisconsin evidence of valley glaciers in the Great Gulf would likely have been expunged by the presence of continental ice. In order to determine the origins of the terminal moraine, representative samples of the till composing the moraine were collected by digging five test pits across the feature, sampling ~50 hand-sized stones from each pit, and determining the provenence of individual stones. Initial results indicate that the moraine is composed of unsorted clasts with provenances of both local and regional origin. Clasts sourced within the Great Gulf support the interpretation that they were deposited by processes dependent on the presence of a local mountain glacier during a post-Wisconsin climate reversal. Stones of more distant origins may be attributed to residual till, associated with a continental ice mass that occupied the cirque at the time of local glacier reactivation. Ongoing work includes the continued evaluation of the provenance of additional clasts and the reconstruction of former valley-ice profiles based on the physical attributes of the cirque and the location of the terminal moraine.