4.3 Article

Constraining Holocene lake levels and coastal dune activity in the Lake Michigan basin

Journal

JOURNAL OF PALEOLIMNOLOGY
Volume 47, Issue 3, Pages 373-390

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10933-010-9460-2

Keywords

Nipissing transgression; Sand dunes; Time series analysis; Water levels; Lake Michigan; Lake Huron

Funding

  1. NOAA Illinois-Indiana [NA16RG2283]

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Sediment cores collected from embayed lakes along the east-central coast of Lake Michigan are used to construct aeolian sand records of past coastal dune mobility, and to constrain former lake levels in the Lake Michigan basin. Time series analysis of sand cycles based on the weight-percent aeolian sand within lacustrine sediment, reveals statistically significant spectral peaks that coincide with established lake level cycles in Lake Michigan and the Gleissberg sunspot cycle of minima. Longer cycles of similar to 800 and similar to 2200 years were also identified that correspond to solar cycles. Shorter cycles between 80 and 220 years suggest a link between coastal dune mobility, climate, and lake levels in the Lake Michigan basin. Radiocarbon-dated sedimentary contacts of lacustrine sediment overlying wetland sediment record the Nipissing transgression in the Lake Michigan basin. Lake level rise closely mimics the predicted uplift of the North Bay outlet, with lake level rise slowing when outflow was transferred to the Port Huron/Sarnia outlet. The Nipissing highstand was reached after 5000 cal (4.4 ka) BP.

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