Abstract
Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS) reconstructions beyond the last glacial maximum (LGM) are difficult due to the incomplete stratigraphic record that has largely been eroded by the most recent glaciation. The Hudson Bay Lowland (HBL) is a key region to understanding the long-term evolution of the LIS, as it contains an extensive pre-LGM stratigraphic record of glacial and nonglacial events. This study uses a hybrid lithostratigraphy–allostratigraphy approach to decipher the stratigraphic record in the Kaskattama highland region of the western HBL, Manitoba, Canada. We identify five glacial (till) units and three nonglacial (sorted sediment) units that were deposited during at least three glacial–interglacial cycles, which are constrained by radiocarbon and optical ages. The provenance of till units is identified using clast-lithology and detrital hornblende 40Ar/39Ar ages and supported by matrix geochemistry. The new stratigraphic framework for this western HBL region indicates that the ice emanating from the Quebec–Labrador dome advanced into the region at the start of the last two glaciations, suggesting accelerated early growth of the Quebec–Labrador dome relative to the Keewatin Dome.
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