Lake Bassano

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Lake Bassano was a proglacial lake that formed in the Late Pleistocene during the deglaciation of south-central Alberta by the impoundment of a re-established drainage system and addition of glacial meltwater. It is associated with the development of through-flowing drainage within the Red Deer River basin in particular, and the South Saskatchewan drainage network in general. Approximately 7,500 square kilometers of the is covered with lacustrine sediments. These sediments are bordered by the topographically higher Buffalo Lake Moraine to the west, the Suffield Moraine to the east and the Lethbridge Moraine to the south.

The transmission of water through the basin was ultimately controlled by the regional topography and the position of the ice front. As the Laurentide Ice Sheet retreated, lower outlet channels were exposed. The lake levels at any given time were constrained by the elevation of the lowest drainage channel. As Glacial Lake Bassano, and the proglacial lake system as a whole developed, throughflow in individual channels waxed, waned and reversed, depending on the systemic controls.

Proglacial Lake System[]

The retreat of the late Wisconsinan Laurentide Ice Sheet in Alberta was accompanied by the deposition of extensive areas of proglacial lake sediments associated with ice frontal positions.[1] These lakes formed as a result of impoundment of the re-established proglacial drainage system and glacial meltwater. Quigley (1980) estimates that roughly 50% of Alberta was occupied by these short-lived lakes. The mapping of sediments deposited by lacustrine and related glacial processes allows the determination of ice-frontal positions at sequential recessional phases. St. Onge (1972), for example, constructed a detailed and comprehensive series of glacial-marginal positions for north-central Alberta. There are, however, a wide variety of chronological interpretations and problems related to the proposed ice-marginal positions in Southern Alberta.[2] Work on individual glacial lakes in Southern Alberta [3] has not produced a definitive synthesis of the . Early work was hampered by a lack of precise elevational control; later work has suffered from a paucity of chronological control and the lack of any detailed study of the integrated relationships between the proglacial lakes in southern Alberta. By topographic analysis, it is possible to accurately determine the sequence of formation and drainage, as well as the maximum and minimum elevations of the proglacial lakes

In southern Alberta, the network of proglacial lakes lowered, with recession of the Laurentide Ice Sheet, from the 1100m maximum elevation of Glacial Lake McLeod to the final 680m elevation of Glacial Lake Empress. The confluence of flow through Glacial Lakes Drumheller, Gleichen and Lethbridge utilized Etzikom Coulee to enter the . When Etzikom Coulee was abandoned at 915m (the height of the Lethbridge Moraine Divide) discharge from the lakes was entirely within Alberta.

Glacial Lake Drumheller abandoned the at 945m, whereupon discharge was directed through the smaller Crowfoot channel until 915m. At this elevation, flow must have been diverted further to the east, over the Bassano basin. Glacial Lake Gleichen abandoned the southward-flowing McGregor Lake Channel at 860m and discharged eastward into Glacial Lake Bassano until channelization occurred at 850m.

With recession of the ice, Glacial Lake Lethbridge lowered and extended eastward, forming Glacial Lake Taber, whose upper level was controlled by Chin Coulee (915m). Subsequent drainage flowed through Forty Mile Coulee until 792m and along the valley of the South Saskatchewan, which became channelized at 760m. Glacial Lake Medicine Hat formed at roughly 760m and ponding at that location was associated with the formation of to the north at roughly the same elevation.

Glacial Lake Bassano existed from a maximum elevation of 915m until final drainage at690-700m. Its initiation coincides with the abandonment of southward-flowing drainage into the Missouri System and the beginning of drainage within Alberta. Together with Glacial Lake Tilley to the south, Glacial Lake Bassano received the discharge from over 1000 km of the Laurentide Ice Sheet and associated proglacial lakes.

References[]

  1. ^ (St. Onge 1972; Quigley 1980; Shetsen 1987; Vreeken 1989)
  2. ^ (Christiansen 1979; Clayton and Moran 1982; Shetsen 1984; Dyke and Prest 1987; Teller 1987; Teller and Moran 1980; Klassen 1994)
  3. ^ (Horberg 1954; Stalker 1973; Vreeken 1989)

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