Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-v9fdk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T06:43:28.541Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Full-glacial paleosols in perennially frozen loess sequences, Klondike goldfields, Yukon Territory, Canada

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Paul T. Sanborn*
Affiliation:
Ecosystem Science and Management Program, University of Northern British Columbia, 3333 University Way, Prince George, BC, Canada V2N 4Z9
C.A. Scott Smith
Affiliation:
Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, PARC Summerland, 4200 Hwy 97, Summerland, BC, Canada V0H 1Z0
Duane G. Froese
Affiliation:
Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada T6G 2E1
Grant D. Zazula
Affiliation:
Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University, 8888 University Drive, Burnaby, BC, Canada V5A 1S6
John A. Westgate
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada M5S 3B1
*
Corresponding author. Fax: +1 250 960 5539. E-mail address:sanborn@unbc.ca, (P.T. Sanborn).

Abstract

Perennially frozen loess deposits in the Klondike goldfields include paleosols formed in full-glacial environments, correlated by Alaskan distal tephra with Marine Isotope Stages (MIS) 2 and 4. Patterns of organic and inorganic carbon and clay distribution, microstructures, and profile morphologies indicate that soil formation occurred in a base-rich environment in which organic matter accreted predominantly as root detritus. At sites approximately 20 km apart, the expression of cryoturbation and ice wedge development decreases in strength upward in loess–paleosol sequences correlated with MIS 4, suggesting increasing aridity. Configurations of cryoturbation features and ice-wedge thaw unconformities, the presence of numerous ground squirrel burrows, and an absence of peat accumulation suggest that these substrates were predominantly well-drained, with active layers of equal or greater thickness than in modern soils on similar sites in the west-central Yukon. Some characteristics of these paleosols are similar to those of modern steppe and tundra soils, consistent with plant macrofossil evidence for local ecological diversity during full-glacial conditions in eastern Beringia.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
University of Washington

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bockheim, J.G., Tarnocai, C., Kimble, J.M., and Smith, C.A.S. The concept of gelic materials in the new Gelisol order for permafrost-affected soils. Soil Science (1997). 927939.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bundy, L.G., and Bremner, J.M. A simple titrimetric method for determination of inorganic carbon in soils. Soil Science Society of America Proceedings 36, (1972). 273275.Google Scholar
Chlachula, J., Kemp, R.A., Jessen, C.A., Palmer, A.P., and Toms, P.S. Landscape development in response to climatic change during Oxygen Isotope Stage 5 in the southern Siberian loess region. Boreas 33, (2004). 164180.Google Scholar
Cwynar, L.C., and Ritchie, J.C. Arctic steppe-tundra: a Yukon perspective. Science 208, (1980). 13751377.Google Scholar
Expert Committee on Soil Survey Manual for describing soils in the field. LRRI Contribution No. 82-52. (1983). Research Branch, Agriculture Canada, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Fox, C.A., and Protz, R. Definition of fabric distributions to characterize the rearrangement of soil particles in the Turbic Cryosols. Canadian Journal of Soil Science 61, (1981). 2934.Google Scholar
Fraser, T.A., and Burn, C.R. On the nature and origin of “muck” deposits in the Klondike area, Yukon Territory. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 34, (1997). 13331344.Google Scholar
Froese, D.G., Duk-Rodkin, A., and Bond, J.D. Field Guide to Quaternary Research in Central and Western Yukon Territory. CANQUA Field Trip. Occasional Papers in Earth Sciences vol. 2, (2001). Yukon Heritage Branch, Whitehorse, Yukon. August Google Scholar
Froese, D., Westgate, J., Preece, S., and Storer, J. Age and significance of the Late Pleistocene Dawson tephra in eastern Beringia. Quaternary Science Reviews 21, (2002). 21372142.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gee, G.W., and Bauder, J.W. Particle-size analysis. Klute, A. Methods of Soil Analysis. Part I. Physical and Mineralogical Methods. Agronomy Monograph vol. 9, (1986). Soil Science Society of America, Madison, WI. 331362.Google Scholar
Green, A.J., Valentine, K.W.G., Brierly, A.J., (1978). Are there Black Chernozemic soils above treeline in British Columbia?. Abstracts, 11th International Congress of Soil Science, Edmonton., June 19–27, 1978. 1, 312.Google Scholar
Guthrie, R.D. Frozen Fauna of the Mammoth Steppe: The Story of Blue Babe. (1990). The University of Chicago Press, Chicago. 323 pp. Google Scholar
Höfle, C., and Ping, C.-L. Properties and soil development of late-Pleistocene paleosols from Seward Peninsula, northwest Alaska. Geoderma 71, (1996). 219243.Google Scholar
Höfle, C., Edwards, M.E., Hopkins, D.M., and Mann, D.H. The full-glacial environment of the northern Seward Peninsula, Alaska, reconstructed from the 21,500-year-old Kitluk paleosol. Quaternary Research 53, (2000). 143153.Google Scholar
Kemp, R.A. Micromorphology of loess–paleosol sequences: a record of paleoenvironmental change. Catena 35, (1999). 179196.Google Scholar
Kemp, R.A., Derbyshire, E., and Meng, X. Comparison of proxy records of Late Pleistocene climate change from a high-resolution loess–paleosol sequence in north-central China. Journal of Quaternary Science 14, (1999). 9196.3.0.CO;2-1>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kemp, R.A., Toms, P.S., King, M., and Kröhling, D.M. The pedosedimentary evolution and chronology of Tortugas, a Late Quaternary type-site of the northern Pampa, Argentina. Quaternary International 114, (2004). 101112.Google Scholar
Kotler, E., and Burn, C.R. Cryostratigraphy of the Klondike “muck” deposits, west-central Yukon Territory. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 37, (2000). 849861.Google Scholar
Laxton, N.F., Burn, C.F., and Smith, C.A.S. Productivity of loessal grasslands in the Kluane Lake region, Yukon Territory, and the Beringian “Production Paradox”. Arctic 49, (1996). 129140.Google Scholar
Marsh, J., Nouvet, S., Sanborn, P., and Coxson, D. (in press). Composition and function of biological soil crust communities along topographic gradients in grasslands of central interior British Columbia (Chilcotin) and southwestern Yukon (Kluane).. Canadian Journal of Botany.Google Scholar
Mermut, A.R., and St. Arnaud, R.J. Microband fabric in seasonally frozen soils. Soil Science Society of America Journal 45, (1981). 578586.Google Scholar
Mücher, H.J., and Vreeken, W.J. (Re)deposition of loess in southern Limbourg, The Netherlands. 2. Micromorphology of the Lower Silt Loam complex and comparison with deposits produced under laboratory conditions. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms 6, (1981). 355363.Google Scholar
Mücher, H.J., De Ploey, J., and Savat, J. Response of loess materials to simulated translocation by water: micromorphological observations. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms 6, (1981). 331336.Google Scholar
Muhs, D.R., Ager, T.A., Been, J., Rosenbaum, J., and Reynolds, R. An evaluation of methods for identifying and interpreting paleosols in late Quaternary loess in Alaska. U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1615, (2000). 127146.Google Scholar
Muhs, D.R., Ager, T.A., Bettis, E.A. III, McGeehin, J., Been, J.M., Begét, J.E., Pavich, M.J., Stafford, T.W. Jr., and Stevens, D.S.P. Stratigraphy and palaeoclimatic significance of Late Quaternary loess–paleosol sequences of the Last Interglacial–Glacial cycle in central Alaska. Quaternary Science Reviews 22, (2003). 19471986.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nichols, J.D. Relation of organic carbon to soil properties and climate in the southern Great Plains. Soil Science Society of America Journal 48, (1984). 13821384.Google Scholar
Pawluk, S. Faunal micromorphological features in modern humus of some western Canadian soils. Geoderma 40, (1987). 316.Google Scholar
Pawluk, S. Freeze–thaw effects on granular structure reorganization for soil materials of varying texture and moisture content. Canadian Journal of Soil Science 68, (1988). 485494.Google Scholar
Péwé, T.L. Quaternary Geology of Alaska. U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 835, (1975). 143 pp Google Scholar
Preece, S.J., Westgate, J.A., Alloway, B.V., and Milner, M.W. Characterization, identity, distribution, and source of late Cenozoic tephra beds in the Klondike district of the Yukon, Canada. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 37, (2000). 983996.Google Scholar
Ritchie, J.C., and Cwynar, L.C. The Late-Quaternary vegetation of the northern Yukon. Hopkins, D.M., MatthewsJr, J.V., Schweger, C.E., and Young, S.B. Paleoecology of Beringia. (1982). Academic Press, New York. 113126.Google Scholar
Sanborn, P., and Pawluk, S. Microstructure diversity in Ah horizons of Black Chernozemic soils, Alberta and British Columbia (Canada). Geoderma 45, (1989). 221240.Google Scholar
Schweger, C.E. Late Quaternary palaeoecology of the Yukon: a review. Danks, H.V., and Downes, J.A. Insects of the Yukon. (1997). Biological Survey of Canada (Terrestrial Arthropods), Ottawa. 5972.Google Scholar
Smith, C.A.S., Fox, C.A., and Hargrave, A.E. Development of soil structure in some turbic cryosols in the Canadian low arctic. Canadian Journal of Soil Science 71, (1991). 1129.Google Scholar
Smith, C.A.S., Swanson, D.K., Moore, J.P., Ahrens, J.P., Bockheim, J.G., Kimble, J.M., Mazhitova, G.G., Ping, C.L., and Tarnocai, C. A description and classification of soils and landscapes of the lower Kolyma River, northeastern Russia. Polar Geography and Geology 19, (1995). 107126.Google Scholar
Soil Classification Working Group The Canadian System of Soil Classification. Publication 1646. (1998). Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Soil Survey Staff Soil taxonomy. 2nd ed. USDA-NRCS. Ag. Handbk vol. 436, (1999). United States Government Printing Office, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Van Vliet-Lanöe, B. Frost effects in soils. Boardman, J. Soils and Quaternary Landscape Evolution. (1985). Wiley, New York. 117158.Google Scholar
Vreeken, W.J. (Re)deposition of loess in southern Limbourg, The Netherlands. 3. Field evidence for conditions of deposition of the Middle and Upper Silt Loam Complexes, and landscape evolution at Nagelbeek. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms 9, (1984). 118.Google Scholar
Westgate, J.A., and Preece, S.J. A cautionary tale of two tephras: the scientific method eking out errors in the late Cenozoic tephrochronological record of eastern Beringia. Abstracts with Programs. Geological Society of America 37, (2005). 38 Google Scholar
Westgate, J.A., Preece, S.J., Froese, D.G., Walter, R.C., Sandhu, A.S., and Schweger, C.E. Dating Early and Middle (Reid) Pleistocene glaciations in Central Yukon by tephrochronology. Quaternary Research 56, (2001). 335348.Google Scholar
Zazula, G.D., Froese, D.G., Westgate, J.A., La Farge, C., and Mathewes, R.W. Paleoecology of Beringian “packrat” middens from central Yukon Territory, Canada. Quaternary Research 63, (2005). 189198.Google Scholar