Paleomagnetic evidence for multiple late Pliocene-early Pleistocene glaciations in the Klondike area, Yukon Territory
Paleomagnetic evidence for multiple late Pliocene-early Pleistocene glaciations in the Klondike area, Yukon Territory
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences = Revue Canadienne des Sciences de la Terre (June 2000) 37 (6): 863-877
- age
- Canada
- Canadian Cordillera
- Cenozoic
- clastic sediments
- correlation
- cycles
- depositional environment
- drainage patterns
- Gauss Chron
- glacial environment
- glacial geology
- glaciation
- gravel
- ice movement
- ice wedges
- interglacial environment
- Jaramillo Subchron
- Klondike
- loess
- lower Pleistocene
- magnetostratigraphy
- Matuyama Chron
- Neogene
- North America
- North American Cordillera
- paleoclimatology
- paleogeography
- paleomagnetism
- periglacial environment
- periglacial features
- Pleistocene
- Pliocene
- Quaternary
- reversals
- sediments
- terraces
- Tertiary
- upper Cenozoic
- upper Pliocene
- Western Canada
- Yukon Territory
- Midnight Dome Loess
The Late Pliocene-Early Pleistocene terraces of the Klondike area provide a conformal record of sedimentation which marks the transition from preglacial to glacial conditions, and is one of the most complete records of glaciation and interglaciation in the northern Cordillera. Preglacial sedimentation is recorded in the Lower White Channel gravel that contains a reverse-normal polarity sequence. A re-aggradation of the nonglaciated valleys of the goldfields in response to Late Pliocene cooling is recorded by the Upper White Channel gravel, which is characterized by a dominant normal polarity with a lower reversal likely associated with the first ice-wedge casts. Klondike gravel interfingers with Upper White Channel and is normally magnetized, indicating an equivalent magnetostratigraphic unit. This glaciofluvial gravel provides evidence of extra-basinal clasts, marking a major reorganization of drainage associated with the first advance of the Cordilleran Ice Sheet in western Yukon Territory correlated with the Gauss chron (>2.58 Ma). An intermediate terrace in Klondike valley is overlain by 8 m of fluvial and glaciofluvial gravel named the Midnight Dome gravel. This gravel is mantled by 15 m of loess and hillslope deposits, named the Midnight Dome loess, which preserve at least three interglacial pollen assemblages, and a reverse-normal-reverse-normal polarity sequence assigned to the late Matuyama chron, including Jaramillo subchron (1.07-0.99 Ma), and early Brunhes chron (<0.78 Ma). The oldest glaciations here, based on the preferred interpretation, extend well into the Pliocene (>2.58 Ma) making these among the oldest glacial sediments in North America.