Christiansen EA. 1979. The Wisconsinan deglaciation of southern Saskatchewan and adjacent areas. Canadian Journal of Earth Science 16: 913-938.
This author describes in considerable detail the process of deglaciation that occurred at the end of the last glacial maximum from about 17 000 years ago, as it occurs to Saskatchewan. Major geological features and patterns of melt-water drainage led to the inclusion of nearby parts of Alberta, Manitoba, Montana, and North Dakota in the analysis. Patterns during the deglaciation were identified by glacial landforms, many of which are apparent only from aerial photographs, with sample analysis in the lab including radio-carbon dating.
The period from 17 000 years to 10 000 years ago is divided into 9 phases corresponding to periods of rapid glacial retreat or temporary stasis or glacial advance. By 10 000 years ago the ice sheet that had covered nearly the entire province had retreated towards Hudson Bay and covered only a small part of the north of Saskatchewan. Glacial lakes formed from meltwater and from water flowing from the west (presumably sourced from glaciers in the Rocky mountains), sometimes reaching enormous sizes; these lakes were bordered by the glacier’s edge, and connected to each other via spillways that often carved large channels from the plains; the east-west valleys of southern Saskatchewan such as the Qu’Appelle valley are the remains of such spillways. Modern river systems such as the Saskatchewan River and the Churchill River formed during the glacial retreat, occupying low areas and spillway remnants.
The rate of deglaciation varied considerably over the studied 7 000 years, generally accelerating from about 150 m / yr to around 275 m / yr, though with frequent pauses, occasional re-advances, and variation across the glacial edge. The evidence from glacial lake-edge movements and depth patterns suggests the ice sheet melted fastest initially, but with the slowest retreat at that time indicating the sheet first thinned, and then retreated, especially around newly-uncovered Nunataks where the underlying land formed highlands.
This paper was on the suggested reading list for the course SLSC 834 in August 2010, but it is also personally interesting in describing Pleistocene events in areas I visit during Sunday drives across the center of the province.
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