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CATENA
Volume 74, Issue 2, 15 July 2008, Pages 144-152
 
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doi:10.1016/j.catena.2008.03.016    
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Copyright © 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Use of soil chronosequences for testing the existence of high-water-level lakes in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica

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J.G. Bockheima, Corresponding Author Contact Information, E-mail The Corresponding Author, I.B. Campbellb, E-mail The Corresponding Author and M. McLeodc, E-mail The Corresponding Author

aDepartment of Soil Science, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706-1299, USA

bLand and Soil Consultancy Services, Nelson, New Zealand

cLandcare Research, Hamilton, New Zealand


Received 20 February 2008; 
revised 24 March 2008; 
accepted 27 March 2008. 
Available online 20 May 2008.

Abstract

In this study we utilize field observations and data collected from 190 pedons from Wright and Taylor Valleys to search for evidence of high-water-level lakes proposed to have existed during the Last Glacial Maximum and early Holocene (2.7–25.7 ka) in the McMurdo Dry Valleys. We hypothesize that soils above the uppermost paleo-lake level should be more strongly developed and contain more salts than soils below. During detailed mapping of soils in the Dry Valleys, we found no evidence of former lake sediments nor did we find high-level strandlines except for strandlines on the north valley wall ca. 50 m above Lake Vanda, ice-shove features, or paleo-shore features. However, there may have been minor expansions of major lakes in the McMurdo Dry Valleys. In central Taylor and Wright Valleys, soils on equivalent-aged drifts above and below the conjectured upper limits of Glacial Lakes Washburn (336 m) and Wright (550 m), respectively, are all well developed with no appreciable differences in their properties. Moreover, there were no significant differences in the slopes of regression equations relating soil property to age of the parent materials above and below the high-water lake levels.

Keywords: Salts; Ecological legacies; Wright Valley; Paleo-lakes

Article Outline

1. Introduction
2. Study sites
3. Methods
4. Results
4.1. General field observations
4.2. Taylor Valley
4.3. Wright Valley
5. Discussion
5.1. Field observations
5.2. Comparison of analytical soil properties above and below the uppermost lake levels
5.3. Evidence for steady-state salt accumulation
5.4. Climatic requirements for high-level lakes
6. Conclusions
Acknowledgements
References





Corresponding Author Contact InformationCorresponding author. Fax: +1 608 265 2595.

CATENA
Volume 74, Issue 2, 15 July 2008, Pages 144-152
 
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