Search About RLL About Mattick About Supplement Add to Supplement PDF file providers Help

Full record view

Wiles, G. C./ G. C. Jacoby/ N. K. Davi/ R. P. Mcallister 2002: Late Holocene glacier fluctuations in the Wrangell Mountains, Alaska. - Bulletin of the Geological Society of America 114(7): 896-908. [RLL List # 231 / Rec.# 34708]
Keywords: Alaska/ Glaciers/ Holocene/ Tree rings/ Wrangell-St. Elias Mountains/ Radiocarbon/ Forestry/ Glaciers/ Geology/ dating method/ dendrochronology/ glaciation/ glacier advance/ Holocene/ paleoclimate/ United States
Abstract: Four intervals of late Holocene glacier advance are recognized from study of nine valley glaciers in the Wrangell and westernmost St. Elias Mountains of Alaska. The oldest glacial advance is recognized at the Nabesna and Barnard Glaciers where five radiocarbon ages suggest advance as early as 2700 cal. (calibrated) yr B.P. Two additional radiocarbon-dated advances are centered on cal. yr A.D. 300 and the beginning of the Little Ice Age about A.D. 1200. The best-documented Little Ice Age advances occurred during the mid-1600s through the 1800s and are recognized at all nine glaciers. These latter advances are dated by tree rings of trees overrun by glaciers in five glacier valley, by 17 radiocarbon dates, and by tree-ring and lichen ages from 20 moraines that were deposited during the culmination of these advances. The glacial chronology is broadly similar to chronologies from adjoining Alaskan mountain ranges, at both coastal and interior sites for the past 3000 yr. There are, however, differences in timing of advances during the first millennium A.D. The glacial history for the past 2000 yr is also consistent with temperature-sensitive proxy records from interior Alaska and Yukon Territory.

URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/0016-7606(2002)114<0896:LHGFIT>2.0.CO

[Email correction]


Upload PDF file to the RLL web site

If you have a PDF file of this RLL/Mattic record, and there are no copyright problems involved, you may upload the file to the RLL/Mattick site. The PDF file will be automatically linked to the paper, and available for download by everyone. Only one PDF file can be linked to a paper, any previous link will be lost.

PDF file::
NB! Legal characters: a-z, A-Z, 0-9, hyphen, underscore, dot (i.e. no diacritics, ampersand, space, etc.).

  


Upload URL to PDF file or web site

Alternatively, you can link this RLL/Mattick record to a PDF file or web page placed somewhere else on the web. Again, only a single link can exist for each record; any previous link will be lost.

Copy and paste the URL you wish to link to this record: