5/15/2023 0 Comments Towermadness 2 ancient lake![]() "We don't know for sure that the flood caused the Earth to slip back into the ice age, but certainly if you put that much water into the Arctic Ocean, the models show you get cooling of the northern hemisphere climate." supervisor and Canada Research Chair in Northern Environmental Change in the Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences. "During the Late Pleistocene, temperatures were returning to normal, when the Earth slipped back into an ice age," said Duane Froese, Norris's Ph.D. What's more, the period in which this great flood occurred corresponds to an event known as the Younger Dryas, when just as the northern hemisphere was emerging from the ice age, it suddenly returned to near-glacial conditions. "It also suggests that we are getting close to quantitatively understanding these rapid erosional-flooding events and linking them with the long-term erosion of landscapes." "When all the uncertainties are considered, the outcome remains pretty solid."Īnother co-author on the paper, Daniel Garcia-Castellanos from Geosciences Barcelona in Spain, added that the study's results suggest the event was the largest terrestrial flood ever recorded from the overtopping of a lake. "What I find deeply satisfying is that modern hydraulic modeling, when applied to the evidence preserved in the landscape, shows how a phenomenal flood propagated 12,000 years ago," said Paul Carling, study co-author from the University of Southampton, UK. All told, the flood drained about 21,000 cubic kilometers of water-about the equivalent to what's in the Great Lakes-in less than nine months. That volume is about 10 times the Amazon River's average discharge every second and one of the largest floods known on Earth. The team came up with an estimated discharge rate of two million cubic meters of water every second, at its height. ![]() The team also created a model of gradual dam failure using the erodibility of bedrock in the region and the size of the lake needed for a spillway through the upper portion of the Clearwater River. The first part of the study used sedimentary evidence to estimate the force of the water, as well as more than 100 valley cross-sections to estimate the size of the flows. "We know that a large discharge has gone through the area but the rate of the discharge or the magnitude was pretty much unknown," said Norris, who is now a postdoctoral research fellow at Dalhousie University. ![]() student in the Faculty of Science, looked at how much water was discharged through the meltwater channel. The international study led by Sophie Norris, a former U of A Ph.D. Geomorphological evidence from northern Alberta also suggests that at some point that lake suddenly spilled out to the northwest along a major channel referred to as the Clearwater-Athabasca Spillway, through what is now Fort McMurray, Alta., into the Mackenzie River basin en route to the Arctic Ocean. The lake formed as the three-kilometer-thick Laurentide Ice Shield atop the northern half of North America began to melt about 16,000 years ago, creating a dam that prevented would-be meltwaters from making their way to Hudson Bay. ![]() ![]() Geologists have long known of an ancient lake, Glacial Lake Agassiz, that occupied as many as 1.5 million square kilometers of what is now southern Manitoba and central Saskatchewan, up to the Alberta border. The finding bolsters a theory that the event may have propelled the warming Earth back into an ice age. ![]()
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