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Post-glacial vegetation history of the Aishihik Basin and its vicinity, southwest Yukon Territory, Canada; a palynological perspective
Nine pollen profiles were obtained along a broad latitudinal transect extending from the Upper Nisling Valley to the Ittlemit Lake and Bear Lakes areas in the southwest Yukon Territory. Radiocarbon dated fossil pollen records from these profiles provided evidence for the reconstruction of postglacial environmental history of the area. Surficial samples combined to aid the interpretation of the fossil data. Records of these sequences suggest that the post-glacial vegetation in the area exhibited a successional development. Immediately after the deglaciation, the area was covered by a sparse herb dominated tundra assemblage. Betula glandulosa invaded the area at about 10,000 yr BP, which initiated the replacement of herbaceous tundra by a dwarf birch shrub-tundra. Picea glauca invaded the Upper Nisling Valley in the northern part of the study area and the Ittlemit Lake Basin in the south at least around 9,000 yr BP, while 8,600 yr BP in the central Aishihik Basin, marked the establishment of forest-tundra environment in the area. Significant rise of Picea pollen at 7,500-8,000 yr BP in the north-central part of the study area indicate the establishment of a modern boreal forest, which is approximately 1,500-2,000 years earlier than that indicated by the Antifreeze Pond pollen diagram from the Snag area of the southwest Yukon. It is notable that the pollen spectra of two lacustrine sediments suggest a phase change of lakes into marsh occurring around 5,000-6,000 yr BP in the area, and change of bog conditions has also been recorded at almost the same time in the area. These events occurred simultaneously in the area and probably reflect the change of climatic conditions, which might have led to the development of permafrost in the region. The development of early post-glacial vegetation in the area exhibited an unstable pattern. This instability was primarily related to the sequential invasion and migration of taxa from late-glacial refugia. Stable vegetation associations were established in the area as a result of migrators reaching their limit of climatic tolerance during the middle Holocene. Post-glacial vegetation history in the Ittlemit Lake Basin area seems to have exhibited a different pattern.
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연관 데이터
Pollen-sedimentary environment relations and late Holocene palynostratigraphy of the Ruby Range, Yukon Territory, Canada
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not_specified
Pre-Mississippian stratigraphy and provenance of the North Slope of Arctic Alaska II: Basinal rocks of the northeastern Brooks Range and their significance in circum-Arctic evolution
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for a copy of this paper please contact the Yukon Geological Survey; geology@gov.yk.ca.
Preliminary geological map of the northwestern Aishihik Lake area, parts of NTS 115H/12 and 13 (1:50 000-scale)
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This map is a Yukon Geological Survey contribution to the Geological Survey of Canada Geo-mapping for Energy and Minerals (GEM) program, Multiple Metals Northwest Canadian Cordillera (MMNCC) project.
Evidence for the Paleozoic sinistral Porcupine Shear Zone in North Yukon (Canadian Arctic) and geotectonic implications
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for a copy of this paper please contact the Yukon Geological Survey; geology@gov.yk.ca.
Pre-Mississippian Stratigraphic Architecture of the Porcupine Shear Zone, Yukon and Alaska, and Significance in the Evolution of Northern Laurentia
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not_specified
Origin and diagenesis of the Manetoe Facies, southern Yukon and Northwest Territories, Canada
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A copy of this thesis is available at the EMR library – QE665.A86 1987.
Sedimentology and drainage history of a glacier dammed lake, St. Elias Mountains, Yukon Territory
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not_specified
Composition and provenance of the Snowcap assemblage, basement to the Yukon-Tanana terrane, northern Cordillera: implications for Cordilleran crustal growth
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This paper is available via open access. You can also contact the Yukon Geological Survey (geology@gov.yk.ca) for a copy of this paper.
The sedimentology and paleogeography of Glacial Lake Champagne, southern Yukon Territory
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not_specified
‘Windy-McKinley’ terrane, western Yukon: new data bearing on its composition, age, correlation and paleotectonic settings
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New geochronological and geochemical data from the ‘Windy-McKinley’* terrane provide insight into the age, correlation and paleotectonic settings of the various subdivisions of the terrane. U-Pb zircon age determinations for felsic meta-volcanic rocks of the White River formation and gabbro intrusions are Late Devonian and late Middle Triassic respectively. These new age determinations substantiate the proposed correlation of these components of ‘Windy-McKinley’ terrane with the succession on strike to the northwest which hosts the volcanogenic massive sulphide deposits in the Delta District, Alaska. Trace-element geochemical data from Triassic gabbro intrusions into the Mirror Creek and White River formations, and diabase and gabbro of the Harzburgite Peak-Eikland Mountain ophiolite suggest that magmatism in both subdivisions occurred in supra-subduction zone settings. However, the age of the ophiolite is not known, therefore mafic magmatism may not be coeval across the terrane and may have formed above different subduction zones at different times. *Quotes are used to indicate that the assignment to Windy and McKinley terranes is obsolete, but a new name has not yet been assigned.