Late Quaternary Land Emergence in Northern Ungava, Quebec

Authors

  • Barry Matthews

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14430/arctic3293

Keywords:

Human geography, Traditional knowledge, Subsistence

Abstract

Twenty-one C14 dates of material from Late Quaternary marine terraces are used to construct an isostatic uplift curve. The phase of rapid uplift averaged about 26 ft. per 100 years, while for the past 5,200 years uplift was just under 1 ft. per 100 years. Updoming resulted in an upward (southerly) tilt of the "Glacier Beach" (460-ft. strandline) and "Upper Tunit Beach" (100-ft. strandline) at about 5.6 ft. per mile and 3.6 ft. per mile respectively. The C14 dates indicate that the general deglaciation of northern Ungava occurred about 7,000 to 8,000 years ago. Twelve well-formed marine terraces have been identified at the heads of the major fjords. The fauna of the "Upper and Lower Aporrhais Beaches" (40 ft. and 55 ft. strandlines) suggests that optimal marine conditions occurred about 3,900 to 5,230 radiocarbon years ago during a possible marine transgression. Hydroclimatic conditions during the formation of Aporrhais deposits in Sugluk Inlet (62°10'N.) corresponded to those at 58°15'N.

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Published

1967-01-01