XVI INQUA Congress

Paper No. 2
Presentation Time: 1:30 PM-4:30 PM

A RECORD OF LATE QUATERNARY ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE: STRATIGRAPHY, PALEOECOLOGY, AND TEPHROCHRONOLOGY FROM MARIPOSA CREEK, YUKON TERRITORY, CANADA


ROTHEISLER, Peter N., Department of Earth Sciences, Univ of Western Ontario, Biology & Geology Building, London, ON N6A 5B7, Canada, JACKSON Jr, Lionel E., Geological Survey of Canada, 605 Robson St., Suite 101, Vancouver, BC V6B 5J3, Canada, HICOCK, Stephen R., Department of Earth Sciences, Univ Western Ontario, Biology & Geology Bldg, London, ON N6A 5B7, Canada and TELKA, Alice M., Paleotec Svcs, 1-574 Somerset St. West, Ottawa, ON K1R 5K2, Canada, peterot@hotmail.com

Late Quaternary stratigraphy, tephra, pollen, plant macrofossils, and insect fossils were studied from a placer mine site along Mariposa Creek in west-central Yukon. Stratigraphy from the eastern placer pit face (Wall A) appears relatively unaffected by cryoturbation and erosional events suggesting a continuous record of environmental change dating back ~ 60 ka. Samples of possible early-Middle Wisconsinan-age (ca. 45 000 to 60 000 B.P.) from Organic Unit 1 indicate an open forest-shrub/tundra environment that was slightly colder and drier than present. Floral and faunal remains from Organic unit 1 correlate well with other probable early-Middle Wisconsinan (Boutellier interval) sites, most notably the Foraker Slump site in Alaska. Preliminary analysis indicates the presence of a previously unidentified type II tephra within Organic Unit 1, tentatively named Mariposa Creek tephra. Overlying Organic Unit 1 is a ~1m thick unit of weathered colluvium cut by an ice-wedge pseudomorph. This colluvium unit may represent severe conditions of the late Wisconsinan. Organic Unit 2 is Holocene with two distinct peat beds occurring near the bottom and top of the unit. Paleoecology of the upper peat (~2850 B.P.) suggests a mature spruce forest analogous to the modern ecological setting. Early Holocene samples from the lower peat bed suggest the presence of an open forest-shrub/tundra environment that was at least as cold and dry as the environment represented in Organic Unit 1.