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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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North America
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Great Lakes
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Lake Michigan (5)
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Great Lakes region (3)
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United States
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Indiana
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Porter County Indiana (1)
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Michigan
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Michigan Lower Peninsula
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Allegan County Michigan (8)
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Barry County Michigan (1)
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Berrien County Michigan (1)
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Kalamazoo County Michigan (1)
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Muskegon County Michigan (1)
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Ottawa County Michigan (1)
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Van Buren County Michigan (2)
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elements, isotopes
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carbon
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C-14 (2)
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isotopes
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radioactive isotopes
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Be-7 (1)
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C-14 (2)
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Cs-137 (1)
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Pb-210 (1)
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metals
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alkali metals
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cesium
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Cs-137 (1)
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alkaline earth metals
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beryllium
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Be-7 (1)
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lead
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Pb-210 (1)
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geochronology methods
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optically stimulated luminescence (1)
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geologic age
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Cenozoic
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Quaternary
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Holocene
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upper Holocene (1)
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Pleistocene
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upper Pleistocene
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Wisconsinan (1)
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Primary terms
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absolute age (2)
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carbon
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C-14 (2)
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Cenozoic
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Quaternary
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Holocene
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upper Holocene (1)
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Pleistocene
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upper Pleistocene
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Wisconsinan (1)
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clay mineralogy (1)
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deformation (1)
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faults (2)
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geomorphology (1)
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geophysical methods (1)
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glacial geology (1)
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ground water (1)
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isotopes
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radioactive isotopes
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Be-7 (1)
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C-14 (2)
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Cs-137 (1)
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Pb-210 (1)
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land use (1)
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metals
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alkali metals
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cesium
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Cs-137 (1)
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alkaline earth metals
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beryllium
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Be-7 (1)
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lead
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Pb-210 (1)
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North America
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Great Lakes
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Lake Michigan (5)
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Great Lakes region (3)
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paleoclimatology (1)
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remote sensing (1)
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sedimentation (1)
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sediments
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clastic sediments
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drift (1)
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sand (2)
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till (2)
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shorelines (1)
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slope stability (3)
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soil mechanics (2)
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stratigraphy (2)
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United States
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Indiana
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Porter County Indiana (1)
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Michigan
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Michigan Lower Peninsula
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Allegan County Michigan (8)
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Barry County Michigan (1)
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Berrien County Michigan (1)
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Kalamazoo County Michigan (1)
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Muskegon County Michigan (1)
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Ottawa County Michigan (1)
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Van Buren County Michigan (2)
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sediments
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sediments
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clastic sediments
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drift (1)
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sand (2)
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till (2)
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soils
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paleosols (1)
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Allegan County Michigan
Sand in lakes and bogs in Allegan County, Michigan, as a proxy for eolian sand transport
Accurately reconstructing the rate of movement and extent of eolian dunes over thousands of years is a challenging endeavor. In this paper, we refine the methodology for utilizing lakes and bogs downwind of dune fields as precise recorders of past eolian activity. Sediment cores from two Allegan County lakes and one bog associated with dunes were studied to evaluate the importance of the various sand transport pathways into lakes and bogs. Goshorn Lake's western edge directly abuts a large parabolic dune. Sand concentrations decrease in cores away from the dunes, possibly reflecting avalanching into the lake followed by sediment gravity flows along the lake bottom. Sand input from stream flow was minor. The Allegan Bog core records a fen-emergent bog transition coincident with a decrease in the sand influx. Poorly understood shoreline processes may have contributed sand to the basin's center before the bog's emergence. Sand in Gilligan Lake cores is texturally similar to adjacent dune sand and the eolian activity history derived from this sand is nearly identical to the history derived from the dune's paleosols and optically stimulated luminescence ages. A proposed lake and bog sampling strategy includes choosing sites in the lee of large dunes edged with emergent vegetation and away from steep slopes or stream inlets. The lake's bathymetry should also be considered. Distinguishing between grain fall sedimentary structures and mass movement or sediment gravity flows is important. This strategy provides relatively high resolution, continuous eolian activity histories that can be correlated with paleoenvironmental proxies from the same cores.
Temporally constrained eolian sand signals and their relationship to climate, Oxbow Lake, Saugatuck, Michigan
Interrelationships among late Holocene climate, the dynamics of coastal dunes and sedimentation in adjacent small lakes along coasts of the upper Great Lakes have been studied for over a decade. Nonetheless, many questions remain as to relationships between climate variability and dune activity. The study site is Oxbow Lake, near Saugatuck, Michigan, which formed as an artificial cutoff of the Kalamazoo River in 1906. Stratigraphic control of the infilled western end of the lake is from ground penetrating radar, and lake sediment from Livingstone and Glew cores with age control from 210 Pb/ 137 Cs/ 7 Be analysis. The climate data used included Lake Michigan water levels and temperature, precipitation, drought and evaporation data from a weather station 30 km to the south and wind data from buoys on Lake Michigan. Episodic peaks of eolian sand in the lake sediment are interpreted to be sourced from adjacent small parabolic dunes along the shoreline and from a foredune west of the lake. Linear regressions of the climate data and weight percent sand resulted in a variety of correlations, some conflicting, and with uncertain meanings. It was found through visual correlation that peaks in sand correspond with both peaks in water levels of Lake Michigan and the winter Palmer drought severity index. The implications of this research are that dune activity is linked to periods of wet conditions and storminess, contrary to typical eolian environments, but consistent with other studies in temperate coastal dunes along the Great Lakes. Results can be used as a modern analogue for coastal dune activity during times of high lake level.
ABSTRACT The Great Lakes coast contains numerous unstable bluffs underlain by heterogeneous glacial materials consisting of till, sand, and gravel layers, and lacustrine clays. Many of the bluffs are steeper than their equilibrium angles and typically move as slow earth slides or occasional rapid slumps. Such movements develop largely where interlayered sand and clay contain perched groundwater that acts to reduce effective stress during winter months when perched potentiometric surface elevations rise because water cannot discharge through frozen soil. Aerial photograph records dating back to 1938 show that bluffs recede in amphitheater-like depressions followed by "catch up" where headlands between amphitheaters are attacked by other forms of erosion. This bluff recession is particularly pronounced during stages of high lake levels. The erosion control experiment described herein has been designed to determine the manner in which groundwater activity influences the causes and mechanisms of mass wasting on the Great Lakes coasts. Three dewatering demonstration sites were selected, monitored electronically for virtually all movement and cause relationships, and dewatered to demonstrate a potential mitigation strategy other than construction of wave barriers. Erosion activity and dewatering effects were carefully monitored for three seasonal cycles. Results show that (1) dewatering greatly reduces ground displacements during winter months, and (2) bluff movements are almost perfectly timed to, or lag slightly after, the hours when potentiometric surfaces near the bluff face reach their highest elevations during freezing (greatest soil pore pressure) or their greatest rates of surficial discharge (soon after thaw). This field guide project was supported by grants from the U.S. Army Research Office, Terrestrial Sciences Program (Grant 3467-GS) from 1996 to 1999 and the U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center (ERDC) from 2000 to 2007, and 2012, through U.S. Senate Bill 227 (National Shoreline Erosion Control Development and Demonstration Program), with support from Western Michigan University (WMU). Additional personnel involved were Alan E. Kehew, Co-PIand, WMU graduate students William Montgomery, Rennie Kaunda, Mark Worrall, Gregory Young, William Bush, and Amanda Brotz. Well and monitoring instrument positions were chosen by R. Chase and designed by Ronald L. Erickson and James P. Selegean, U.S. Army Engineer District, Detroit, Michigan. Well constructions and instrument installations were done by STS Consultants, Chicago, Illinois. This huge project was very smoothly administered by M. Eileen Glynn and William R. Curtis, ERDC, Vicksburg, Mississippi.