Nonglacial deposits in northern Ontario that may date to the last interglacial interval are well known from the Hudson Bay Lowlands where they have been described in sections along several river valleys. Soil horizons, peat beds and other organic sediment sequences comprise the Missinaibi Formation of the Moose River Basin studied for pollen and macrofossils. Results suggest that the climate was as warm or warmer than present, and spruce woodlands prevailed among broad expanses of bog and fen. The Beaver River peat records conditions similar to the present in the Fort Severn area with open spruce woodlands dispersed in peatlands. South of the Lowlands in the Timmins area, a widespread organic-silt horizon termed the Owl Creek beds is strati...