Effect of Dam Emplacement and Water Level Changes on Sublacustrine Geomorphology and Recent Sedimentation in Jackson Lake, Grand Teton National Park (Wyoming, United States)
M. McGlue, John Dilworth, Hillary L. Johnson, S. Whitehead, J. Thigpen, K. Yeager, E. Woolery, Summer J. Brown, S. Johnson, C. Cearley, Gillian M. Clark, T. Dixon, R. Goldsby, Autumn L. Helfrich, B. Hodelka, E. Lo, Leandro Domingos-Luz, N. E. Powell, G. Rasbold, W. Swanger
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引用次数: 2
Abstract
Dam installation on a deep hydrologically open lake provides the experimental framework necessary to study the influence of outlet engineering and changing base levels on limnogeological processes. Here, high-resolution seismic reflection profiles, sediment cores, and historical water level elevation datasets were employed to assess the recent depositional history of Jackson Lake, a dammed glacial lake located adjacent to the Teton fault in western Wyoming (USA). Prograding clinoforms imaged in the shallow stratigraphy indicate a recent lake-wide episode of delta abandonment. Submerged ∼11–12 m below the lake surface, these Gilbert-type paleo-deltas represent extensive submerged coarse-grained deposits along the axial and lateral margins of Jackson Lake that resulted from shoreline transgression following dam construction in the early 20th century. Other paleo-lake margin environments, including delta plain, shoreline, and glacial (drumlins, moraines) landforms were likewise inundated following dam installation, and now form prominent features on the lake floor. In deepwater, a detailed chronology was established using 137Cs, 210Pb, and reservoir-corrected 14C for a sediment core that spans ∼1654–2019 Common Era (CE). Dam emplacement (1908–1916 CE) correlates with a nearly five-fold acceleration in accumulation rates and a depositional shift towards carbonaceous sediments. Interbedded organic-rich black diatomaceous oozes and tan silts track changes in reservoir water level elevation, which oscillated in response to regional climate and downstream water needs between 1908 and 2019 CE. Chemostratigraphic patterns of carbon, phosphorus, and sulfur are consistent with a change in nutrient status and productivity, controlled initially by transgression-driven flooding of supralittoral soils and vegetation, and subsequently with water level changes. A thin gravity flow deposit punctuates the deepwater strata and provides a benchmark for turbidite characterization driven by hydroclimate change. Because the Teton fault is a major seismic hazard, end-member characterization of turbidites is a critical first step for accurate discrimination of mass transport deposits controlled by earthquakes in more ancient Jackson Lake strata. Results from this study illustrate the influence of dam installation on sublacustrine geomorphology and sedimentation, which has implications for lake management and ecosystem services. Further, this study demonstrates that Jackson Lake contains an expanded, untapped sedimentary archive recording environmental changes in the American West.
在深水文学敞湖上建坝,为研究出水口工程和底面变化对湖泊地质过程的影响提供了必要的实验框架。本文采用高分辨率地震反射剖面、沉积物岩心和历史水位高程数据集来评估杰克逊湖(Jackson Lake)最近的沉积历史。杰克逊湖是位于美国怀俄明州西部提顿断层附近的一个堰塞湖。在浅层地层学中成像的推进的斜地形显示了最近整个湖泊的三角洲遗弃事件。这些吉尔伯特型古三角洲位于湖面以下11-12米,代表了杰克逊湖沿轴向和侧缘的广泛的水下粗粒沉积物,是20世纪初大坝建设后的海岸线海侵造成的。其他古湖缘环境,包括三角洲平原、海岸线和冰川地貌(鼓丘、冰碛),也同样在大坝安装后被淹没,现在在湖底形成了突出的特征。在深水,使用137Cs、210Pb和储层校正的14C建立了详细的年代学,用于沉积物岩心,时间跨度为~ 1654-2019 Common Era (CE)。大坝就位(公元1908-1916年)与堆积速率加速近5倍和向碳质沉积物的沉积转移有关。在1908年至2019年间,富有机质的黑色硅藻软泥和棕褐色淤泥跟踪水库水位高程的变化,该变化响应区域气候和下游用水需求而振荡。碳、磷和硫的化学地层模式与营养状况和生产力的变化是一致的,这些变化最初受海侵驱动的沿岸土壤和植被洪水的控制,随后受水位变化的控制。一个薄的重力流沉积点缀着深水地层,为水文气候变化驱动的浊积岩表征提供了基准。由于提顿断层是一个主要的地震危险区,浊积岩的端元特征是准确区分更古老的杰克逊湖地层中受地震控制的块体搬运沉积的关键第一步。研究结果说明了大坝建设对湖底地貌和沉积的影响,这对湖泊管理和生态系统服务具有重要意义。此外,这项研究表明,杰克逊湖包含了一个扩大的、未开发的沉积档案,记录了美国西部的环境变化。