4.6 Article

Evidence for an eolian origin for the silt-enriched soil mantles on the glaciated uplands of eastern Upper Michigan, USA

Journal

GEOMORPHOLOGY
Volume 100, Issue 3-4, Pages 285-295

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2008.01.002

Keywords

loess; Upper Peninsula of Michigan; lake minong; soil survey; soil geochemistry; soil mineralogy

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [0422 108]

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We provide textural, geochemical, and mineralogical data oil a thin, silty deposit that unconformably mantles glaciated uplands in the eastern Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Previous research on this deposit, which we hypothesize to be loess, is nonexistent. The uplands were islands or narrow peninsulas within one or more glacial lakes. We compare the distribution, likely source and nature of the 20-60 cm thick silty mantle by using the loess formation model of Mason et al. [Mason, J.A., Nater, E.A., Zanner, C.W., Bell, J.C., 1999. A new model of topographic effects oil the distribution of loess. Geomorphology 29, 223-236], which focuses oil the generation of eolian silt by saltating sand across upwind, barren Surfaces. Parabolic dunes, with arms open to the NW, are common oil former lake floors upwind of the silt-mantled uplands, attesting to the strength and direction of paleowinds. The abrupt termination of the dunes at the footslopes of the uplands, associated with silt deposition oil upland soil surfaces in downwind locations, are both consistent with the model of Mason et al. [Mason, J.A., Nater, E.A., Zanner, C,W., Bell, J.C., 1999. A new model of topographic effects on the distribution of loess. Geomorphology 28, 223-236]. Sediments on former lake floors contain abundant strata of fine/medium sand and silt, and thus are likely sources for the silt and dune sand. The cap, dune and lake sediments are similar along many different geochemical axes, whereas the substrate sediment, i.e., the drift below the cap, is unique. Cap sediments, normally containing roughly 30% silt, are enriched in quartz and depleted in Ti and Zr, relative to dune sediment. The dune sediment, a more residual eolian deposit, is enriched in Ti arid Zr, relative to the cap, probably due to its greater abundance of heavy minerals. Therefore, we conclude that the silty cap is loess that was deflated from abandoned lake floors after nearby glacial lakes drained, probably contemporaneously with dune migration across the former lake floors. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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