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Facies analysis of yedoma thermokarst lakes on the northern Seward Peninsula, Alaska

Facies analysis of yedoma thermokarst lakes on the northern Seward Peninsula, Alaska
Facies analysis of yedoma thermokarst lakes on the northern Seward Peninsula, Alaska
Thermokarst lakes develop as a result of the thaw and collapse of ice-rich, permanently frozen ground (permafrost). Of particular sedimentological importance are thermokarst lakes forming in late Pleistocene icy silt (yedoma), which dramatically alter the land surface by lowering surface elevation and redistributing upland sediment into lower basins. Our study provides the first description of yedoma thermokarst lake sedimentology based on the cross-basin sampling of an existing lake. We present lake sediment facies descriptions based on data from sediment cores from two thermokarst lakes of medium depth, Claudi and Jaeger (informal names), which formed in previously non thermokarst-affected upland yedoma on the northern Seward Peninsula, Alaska. We identify four prominent facies using sedimentological, biogeochemical, and macrofossil indicators: a massive silt lacking aquatic macrofossils and other aquatic indicators situated below a sub-lacustrine unconformity (Facies 1); two basal deposits: interbedded organic silt and chaotic silt (Facies 2–3); and a silt-rich mud (Facies 4). Facies 1 is interpreted as yedoma that has thawed during lake formation. Facies 3 formed adjacent to the margin due to thaw and collapse events from the lake shore. Material from Facies 3 was reworked by wave action to form Facies 2 in a medium energy margin environment. Facies 4 formed in a lower energy environment toward the lake basin center. This facies classification and description should enhance our ability (i) to interpret the spatial and temporal development of lakes and (ii) to reconstruct long-term patterns of landscape change.
permafrost, yedoma, thermokarst lake, sedimentology, facies
0037-0738
25-37
Farquharson, Louise
9494b068-b7b7-4e22-be20-03d6d44c8a17
Anthony, Katey Walter
1ad016d3-0587-4569-b881-4544bf33a489
Bigelow, Nancy
a0bf3e86-6daa-49db-a0a8-5b48364d4399
Edwards, Mary
4b6a3389-f3a4-4933-b8fd-acdfef72200e
Grosse, Guido
e9a40d3f-167c-4b37-9c0d-b153bb88fd5c
Farquharson, Louise
9494b068-b7b7-4e22-be20-03d6d44c8a17
Anthony, Katey Walter
1ad016d3-0587-4569-b881-4544bf33a489
Bigelow, Nancy
a0bf3e86-6daa-49db-a0a8-5b48364d4399
Edwards, Mary
4b6a3389-f3a4-4933-b8fd-acdfef72200e
Grosse, Guido
e9a40d3f-167c-4b37-9c0d-b153bb88fd5c

Farquharson, Louise, Anthony, Katey Walter, Bigelow, Nancy, Edwards, Mary and Grosse, Guido (2016) Facies analysis of yedoma thermokarst lakes on the northern Seward Peninsula, Alaska. [in special issue: Limnological Processes in Permafrost Environments] Sedimentary Geology, 340, 25-37. (doi:10.1016/j.sedgeo.2016.01.002).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Thermokarst lakes develop as a result of the thaw and collapse of ice-rich, permanently frozen ground (permafrost). Of particular sedimentological importance are thermokarst lakes forming in late Pleistocene icy silt (yedoma), which dramatically alter the land surface by lowering surface elevation and redistributing upland sediment into lower basins. Our study provides the first description of yedoma thermokarst lake sedimentology based on the cross-basin sampling of an existing lake. We present lake sediment facies descriptions based on data from sediment cores from two thermokarst lakes of medium depth, Claudi and Jaeger (informal names), which formed in previously non thermokarst-affected upland yedoma on the northern Seward Peninsula, Alaska. We identify four prominent facies using sedimentological, biogeochemical, and macrofossil indicators: a massive silt lacking aquatic macrofossils and other aquatic indicators situated below a sub-lacustrine unconformity (Facies 1); two basal deposits: interbedded organic silt and chaotic silt (Facies 2–3); and a silt-rich mud (Facies 4). Facies 1 is interpreted as yedoma that has thawed during lake formation. Facies 3 formed adjacent to the margin due to thaw and collapse events from the lake shore. Material from Facies 3 was reworked by wave action to form Facies 2 in a medium energy margin environment. Facies 4 formed in a lower energy environment toward the lake basin center. This facies classification and description should enhance our ability (i) to interpret the spatial and temporal development of lakes and (ii) to reconstruct long-term patterns of landscape change.

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Accepted/In Press date: 5 January 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 January 2016
Published date: 1 July 2016
Keywords: permafrost, yedoma, thermokarst lake, sedimentology, facies
Organisations: Palaeoenvironment Laboratory (PLUS)

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 394426
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/394426
ISSN: 0037-0738
PURE UUID: 34fba932-583a-4f78-8960-3f8619363502
ORCID for Mary Edwards: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3490-6682

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Date deposited: 18 May 2016 12:58
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:13

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Contributors

Author: Louise Farquharson
Author: Katey Walter Anthony
Author: Nancy Bigelow
Author: Mary Edwards ORCID iD
Author: Guido Grosse

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