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Abstract Rock glaciers are common in alpine landscapes, but their evolution over time and their significance as agents of debris transport are not well‐understood. Here, we assess the movement of an ice‐cemented rock glacier over a range of timescales using GPS surveying, satellite‐based radar, and cosmogenic10Be surface‐exposure dating. GPS and InSAR measurements indicate that the rock glacier moved at an average rate of ∼10 cm yr−1in recent years. Sampled boulders on the rock glacier have cosmogenic surface‐exposure ages from 1.2 to 10 ka, indicating that they have been exposed since the beginning of the Holocene. Exposure ages increase linearly with distance downslope, suggesting a slower long‐term mean surface velocity of 3 ± 0.3 cm yr−1. Our findings suggest that the behavior of this rock glacier may be dominated by episodes of dormancy punctuated by intervals of relatively rapid movement over both short and long timescales. Our findings also show that the volume of the rock glacier corresponds to ∼10 m of material stripped from the headwall during the Holocene. These are the first cosmogenic surface‐exposure ages to constrain movement of a North American rock glacier, and together with the GPS and satellite radar measurements, they reveal that rock glaciers are effective geomorphic agents with dynamic multi‐millennial histories.more » « less
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Belanger, Bryce K.; Amidon, William H.; Laabs, Benjamin J. C.; Munroe, Jeffrey S.; Quirk, Brendon J. (, Journal of Quaternary Science)ABSTRACT This study uses a hydrologic‐balance model to evaluate the range of precipitation and temperature (P‐T) conditions required to sustain Lake Bonneville at two lake levels during the late Pleistocene. Intersection with a second set of P‐T curves determined from glacial modelling in the nearby Wasatch Mountains places tighter climatic constraints that suggest gradually increasing wetness from ~21 to 15 ka. Specifically, during the latter part of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) (~21–20 ka), Lake Bonneville approached its highest level under conditions roughly 9.5°C colder but only 7% wetter than modern. As the lake reached its pre‐flood Bonneville level (~18.2–17.5 ka), climate conditions were ~16% wetter and ~9°C colder than modern. Byca. 15–14.8 ka, Lake Bonneville abandoned the overflowing Provo level under conditions that were ~21% wetter and ~7°C cooler. These results suggest that regional LGM highstands were not caused by large increases in precipitation, but rather by a climatic optimum in which moderate wetness combined with depressed temperatures to create a positive hydrologic budget. Later highstands during Heinrich I from 17 to 15 ka were likely achieved under gradual increases in precipitation, prior to a transition to drier conditions after 15 ka.more » « less
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