The Last Interglacial-Glacial Transition in North America

Early Wisconsin lakes and glaciers in the Great Basin, U.S.A
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Published:January 01, 1992
Little is known for certain about early Wisconsin (isotope stage 4) lakes and glaciers of the Great Basin. A moderate lake-level rise in the Bonneville basin is not well dated, but on the basis of amino-acid and radiocarbon ages, is thought to be early Wisconsin in age. A moderate rise of lakes in the basins of Lake Lahontan is dated as ca. 50 ka by U-series ages on tufa, but may have occurred earlier. In the southern Great Basin, Searles Lake fluctuated at levels below the threshold connecting it with Panamint Valley, and Panamint Valley apparently did not contain a large lake during the early Wisconsin. The glacial record is even less-well dated than the lacustrine record. The extent of glaciers in and around the Great Basin during the early Wisconsin is not known; ice extent was certainly greater than at present, but probably was less than the late Wisconsin maximum in most glaciated valleys. Further work is necessary to refine lacustrine and glacial chronologies, and to investigate the causes of lake vs. glacier expansion. Important clues to these questions will come from detailed studies of lacustrine and glacial sequences in different parts of the Great Basin.
- amino acids
- Basin and Range Province
- C-14
- carbon
- Cenozoic
- glacial environment
- glacial extent
- glacial features
- glacial lakes
- glaciers
- Great Basin
- Humboldt Range
- Idaho
- isotopes
- lacustrine environment
- lacustrine features
- Lake Bonneville
- Lake Lahontan
- lakes
- levels
- lower Wisconsinan
- Nevada
- North America
- organic acids
- organic compounds
- organic materials
- Pershing County Nevada
- Pleistocene
- Quaternary
- radioactive isotopes
- Rocky Mountains
- Ruby Range
- Searles Lake
- Sierra Nevada
- Th/Th
- U. S. Rocky Mountains
- United States
- upper Pleistocene
- uranium disequilibrium
- Utah
- Wasatch Range
- Wisconsinan
- Wyoming
- Lake Panamint
- Lake Marly