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  1. Abstract

    A growing body of evidence demonstrates that Atlantic-style passive margins have experienced episodes of uplift and volcanism in response to changes in mantle circulation long after cessation of rifting. Passive margins are thus an attractive archive from which to retrieve records of mantle circulation and lithospheric alteration. However, this archive remains under-utilized due to difficulty in deciphering the surficial records of passive margin tectonism and linking them to seismic velocity structure. Here we present a new approach to unraveling the tectonic history of passive margins using U-Pb dating of calcite in faults and fractures along the eastern North American margin. These ages show a 40 Myr long period of continuous fracturing and faulting from ~115 to 75 Ma followed by another episode in Mio-Pliocene time. We argue that the former event represents a response to Cretaceous lithospheric alteration whereas the latter records development of modern relief in the northern Appalachians.

     
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  2. We applied luminescence dating to a suite of shorelines constructed by pluvial Lake Clover in northeastern Nevada, USA during the last glacial cycle. At its maximum extent, the lake covered 740 km2 with a mean depth of 16 m and a water volume of 13 km3. In the north-central sector of the lake basin, 10 obvious beach ridges extend from the highstand to the lowest shoreline over a horizontal distance of ~1.5 km, representing a lake area decrease of 35%. These ridges are primarily composed of sandy gravel and rise ~1.0 m above the alluvial fan surface on which they are superposed. Single grain luminescence dating of K-feldspar using the pIRIR SAR (post-infrared infrared single-aliquot regenerative dose) protocol, corroborated by SAR dating of quartz, indicates that the highstand shoreline was constructed ca. 16–17 ka during Heinrich Stadial I (Greenland Stadial 2, GS-2), matching 14C age control for this shoreline elsewhere in the basin. The lake regressed rapidly during the Bølling/Allerød (GI-1), before the rate of regression slowed during the Younger Dryas interval (GS-1). The lowest shoreline was constructed ca. 10 ka. Persistence of Lake Clover into the early Holocene may reflect enhanced monsoonal precipitation driven by the summer insolation maximum. 
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  3. 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.

     
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