The Laurentian Great Lakes are a chain of five large water bodies and connecting rivers that constitute the headwaters of the St. Lawrence River. Collectively they form one of the largest reservoirs of surface freshwater on the planet with an aggregate volume of >22,000 km3. Early interpretations of the postglacial lake history implicitly assumed that the Great Lakes always overflowed their outlets. A study of Lake Winnipeg which concluded that lack of water in a dry climate had dried that lake for millennia led to re-evaluation of the Great Lakes water-level history. Using the empirical information of glacioisostatic rebound derived from 14C-dated and uptilted Great Lake paleo-shorelines, a method of computation was developed to test th...
Antarctic sea ice has large impacts on the heat and gas transfers between the ocean andthe atmospher...
Paleosols are an important tool in interpreting Quaternary stratigraphic sequences. Buried, exhumed,...
Changes in the geography of Atlantic Canada since the last glacial maximum (LGM) are grouped into th...
In the Great Lakes region, the vertical motion of crustal rebound since the last glaciation has dece...
This study documents the Holocene evolution of lakes located in the Bluefish Basin, northern Yukon, ...
This study demonstrates that lakes located near the coast, close to large bodies of water, can docum...
The Lake Van (1648 m) is a palaeoclimatic and palaeoenvironmental reference for the Middle East. Acc...
A series of late Wisconsinan sedimentary sequences occupy parts of the Coppermine River valley, and ...
Post-glacial pollen spectra over a wide area of southeastern Canada have been interpreted as showing...
An ice flow model, based on the distribution of distinctive Proterozoic erratics from the Lake Mista...
Biome maps spanning the interval from the last glacial maximum to modern times are presented. The bi...
Enhanced meltwater discharge from proglacial lakes Agassiz and Barlow-Ojibway at about 9.6 to 8.3 ka...
The Lake Nipigon basin lies north of the Lake Superior basin and was the hydrological link between g...
Rivers of the Mackenzie Basin exhibit several seasonal flow patterns that include the nival (snowmel...
Rhythmites overlying either cross-bedded sand or diamicton are found throughout the Ottawa Valley. P...
Antarctic sea ice has large impacts on the heat and gas transfers between the ocean andthe atmospher...
Paleosols are an important tool in interpreting Quaternary stratigraphic sequences. Buried, exhumed,...
Changes in the geography of Atlantic Canada since the last glacial maximum (LGM) are grouped into th...
In the Great Lakes region, the vertical motion of crustal rebound since the last glaciation has dece...
This study documents the Holocene evolution of lakes located in the Bluefish Basin, northern Yukon, ...
This study demonstrates that lakes located near the coast, close to large bodies of water, can docum...
The Lake Van (1648 m) is a palaeoclimatic and palaeoenvironmental reference for the Middle East. Acc...
A series of late Wisconsinan sedimentary sequences occupy parts of the Coppermine River valley, and ...
Post-glacial pollen spectra over a wide area of southeastern Canada have been interpreted as showing...
An ice flow model, based on the distribution of distinctive Proterozoic erratics from the Lake Mista...
Biome maps spanning the interval from the last glacial maximum to modern times are presented. The bi...
Enhanced meltwater discharge from proglacial lakes Agassiz and Barlow-Ojibway at about 9.6 to 8.3 ka...
The Lake Nipigon basin lies north of the Lake Superior basin and was the hydrological link between g...
Rivers of the Mackenzie Basin exhibit several seasonal flow patterns that include the nival (snowmel...
Rhythmites overlying either cross-bedded sand or diamicton are found throughout the Ottawa Valley. P...
Antarctic sea ice has large impacts on the heat and gas transfers between the ocean andthe atmospher...
Paleosols are an important tool in interpreting Quaternary stratigraphic sequences. Buried, exhumed,...
Changes in the geography of Atlantic Canada since the last glacial maximum (LGM) are grouped into th...