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A 12 000 year radiocarbon date of deglaciation from the Continental Divide of northwestern Montana

May 6, 1995

During the Pinedale (Late Wisconsinan) glaciation, an outlet glacier from a mountain ice field flowed eastward across the Continental Divide through Marias Pass in northwestern Montana. This outlet glacier was the major source of the Two Medicine glacier, a large piedmont glacier that extended from the mountain front east about 55 km onto the plains. An accelerator mass spectrometry radiocarbon age of 12 194 ± 145 BP (AA-9530) was obtained from a wood fragment, underlying a Glacier Peak tephra and a Mount Saint Helens set J tephra in a section of lake sediments, near Marias Pass. This radiocarbon age provides a minimum date of deglaciation for the Marias Pass area that is about 800 years older than a previous estimate. Furthermore, the radiocarbon age indicates that the Two Medicine glacier was no longer being supplied by its major source and if it still existed was only as a dying, stagnant ice mass.

Publication Year 1995
Title A 12 000 year radiocarbon date of deglaciation from the Continental Divide of northwestern Montana
DOI 10.1139/e95-106
Authors Paul E. Carrara
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences
Index ID 70209948
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Geosciences and Environmental Change Science Center