Paper No. 18
Presentation Time: 1:30 PM-4:30 PM
A LARGE LATE GLACIAL MELTWATER FLOOD THROUGH THE HUDSON VALLEY, NEW YORK, USA
Two large proglacial meltwater reservoirs, one on either side of the Adirondack
Uplands of New York State, discharged into the North
Atlantic through the Hudson River during the last deglaciation. Glacial Lakes
Albany and Vermont formed in the Hudson and Champlain Valleys on the eastern
side of the Adirondacks and drained directly into the Hudson River Valley, while
Glacial Lake Iroquois formed in the Lake Ontario/St. Lawrence lowlands on the
western side of the Adirondacks, and drained into the Hudson Valley along the
southern flank of the Adirondacks through the Mohawk Valley. When the ice
marginal retreat exposed a low elevation threshold at Covey Hill, Quebec on the
northern flank of the Adirondacks, Lake Iroquois meltwater catastrophically
discharged along the ice margin and into Lake Vermont at Altona, New York. This
resulted in a series of events. First, the level of Lake Iroquois dropped,
abandoning the Mohawk Valley threshold. Second, the catastrophic flood across
the northern flank of the Adirondack Uplands scoured a series of channels in the
sandstone bedrock and deposited bars of boulders at the distal end where it
entered Lake Vermont. Third, while these boulder bars were being deposited, the
level of Lake Vermont dropped rapidly, probably from a breach of its threshold
in the Hudson Valley. We estimate the drop in Lake Iroquois to be 20 m,
resulting in a volume loss of about 550 km3. Cross-section
measurements of the catastrophic discharge channel at Altona along with velocity
estimates derived from the size of the boulders in the bars suggest that
discharge along the ice margin reached 41,000 - 82,000 m3/s. This
event would therefore have had a duration of 75 - 150 days. We estimate volume
loss from the drop in Lake Vermont to be an additional 115 km3, with a
discharge of 9,000 - 18,000 m3/s over 75 - 150 days. The cumulative series of events would have
therefore sent a discharge of 50,000 - 100,000 m3/s through the
Hudson River Valley and into the North Atlantic. The higher end of this
discharge estimate is within the range suggested by models to affect
production of NADW and alter regional climate. Radiocarbon ages in the Lake Champlain Valley indicate
this event occurred between 11,280 and 10,900 14C years
BP.
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