Geomorphic controls on sedimentation in Pleistocene Lake Bonneville, eastern Great Basin
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Published:December 31, 2019
ABSTRACT
The most common and widespread sedimentary facies of Pleistocene Lake Bonneville, in the eastern Great Basin of North America, is marl, which consists of a mixture of fine-grained endogenic calcium carbonate that precipitated in the epilimnion of the lake and then settled onto the lake floor and mixed with fine-grained clastic sediments. Primary sources of clastic sediment were inflowing rivers, wave activity in shore zones, and ice rafting. The thickness of deposits in cores and outcrops is largely dependent on the proportion of clastic sediment, although the rate of endogenic calcium carbonate precipitation probably also varied temporally and spatially. Net sediment-accumulation rate in the marl, as measured in outcrops and cores, ranges from a low of 4 cm/1000 yr, in the middle of the lake basin far from sources of clastic input, to over 100 cm/1000 yr near clastic-sediment sources.
Underflow deposits, derived from higher-density river water loaded with suspended sediment, are thick and extensive near the mouths of major rivers that drained glaciated mountains. Net sediment-accumulation rates in suspended-load underflow deposits were much greater than those in contemporaneously deposited marl. The largest underflow-sediment accumulations, which have a fan shape in plan view, have been referred to as deltas (as at the mouths of the Sevier, Provo, Weber, and Bear Rivers). True Gilbert-type deltas composed of gravel, with topset, foreset, and bottomset beds, are uncommon in the basin.
Variability in the sedimentary characteristics of the Bonneville deposits is determined by geomorphic factors, such as wave energy, composition of surficial material in the shore zone (e.g., resistant bedrock vs. unconsolidated alluvium), slope, and proximity to river mouths and active shore zones.
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Contents
From Saline to Freshwater: The Diversity of Western Lakes in Space and Time

This volume discusses the range of modern and paleolakes found in western North America, as well as analytical tools that have been developed to evaluate these lacustrine deposits.
GeoRef
- Basin and Range Province
- bedload
- Cenozoic
- chronology
- clastic rocks
- clastic sediments
- cores
- deltas
- facies
- fluvial features
- geomorphologic controls
- Gilbert-type deltas
- Great Basin
- ice rafting
- Lake Bonneville
- lake sediments
- marl
- North America
- outcrops
- Pleistocene
- Quaternary
- rivers
- sedimentary rocks
- sedimentation
- sedimentation rates
- sediments
- spatial variations
- suspended materials
- temporal distribution
- United States
- Sevier River
- Bear River
- Weber River
- Provo River