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1 June 2004 Dendroglaciological Evidence For A Neoglacial Advance Of the Saskatchewan Glacier, Banff National Park, Canadian Rocky Mountains
Chris Wood, Dan Smith
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Abstract

Seventeen glacially sheared stumps in growth position and abundant detrital wood fragments were exposed by stream avulsion at the terminus of the Saskatchewan Glacier in 1999. The stumps lay buried beneath the glacier and over 5 m of glacial sediment until historical recession and stream incision exposed the 225- to 262-year-old stand of subalpine fir, Englemann spruce and whitebark pine trees. Crossdating and construction of two radiocarbon-controlled floating tree-ring chronologies showed that all the subfossil stumps and boles exposed at this location were killed during a Neoglacial advance of the Saskatchewan Glacier 2,910 ±60 to 2,730 ±60 14C years B.P. These findings support the Peyto Advance as a regional glaciological response to changing mass balance conditions.

Chris Wood and Dan Smith "Dendroglaciological Evidence For A Neoglacial Advance Of the Saskatchewan Glacier, Banff National Park, Canadian Rocky Mountains," Tree-Ring Research 60(1), 59-65, (1 June 2004). https://doi.org/10.3959/1536-1098-60.1.59
Received: 12 August 2003; Accepted: 1 December 2003; Published: 1 June 2004
KEYWORDS
Canadian Rocky Mountains
dendroglaciology
floating chronology
Peyto Advance
Saskatchewan Glacier
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