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Late Pleistocene environments of the western Noatak basin, northwestern Alaska

January 1, 1999

Glacial Lake Noatak formed repeatedly during middle and late Pleistocene time as expanding glaciers from the DeLong Mountains blocked the Noatak River valley. Downcutting by the Noatak River has exposed thick sediment successions in bluffs up to 86 m high. Two river bluffs, Nk-26 and Nk-29A, contain correlative organic-rich flood-plain deposits that were formed during and after deposition of the Old Crow tephra at about the transition between oxygen isotope stage 6 and oxygen isotope stage 5, at the beginning of the last interglaciation. Both bluffs also contain older interglacial or interstadial flood-plain deposits of uncertain age.

Publication Year 1999
Title Late Pleistocene environments of the western Noatak basin, northwestern Alaska
DOI 10.1130/0016-7606(1999)111<0769:LPEOTW>2.3.CO;2
Authors S. A. Elias, T. D. Hamilton, M. E. Edwards, J. E. Beget, A.P. Krumhardt, C. Lavoie
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Geological Society of America Bulletin
Index ID 70021586
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse