Lake Frontenac

Lake Frontenac was a proglacial lake in the basin of what is now Lake Ontario.[1][2] The sudden influx of fresh water into the Atlantic, as the retreat of the Laurentian Glacier triggered a sudden drop in the lake's water level, may in turn have triggered the onset of the Younger Dryas, 1000-year period of renewed cooling approximately 12000 years ago.

Lake Frontenac
Lake Frontenac
Lake Frontenac
LocationNorth America
GroupGreat Lakes
Coordinates43.58°N 77.19°W / 43.58; -77.19
Lake typeformer lake
EtymologyLouis de Buade, Comte de Frontenac et de Palluau, GOvernor of New France, 1672-1682.
Primary inflowsLaurentide Ice Sheet
Basin countriesCanada
United States
First flooded10,000 years before present
Max. length194 mi (312 km)
Max. width57 mi (92 km)
Surface elevation244 ft (74 m)
ReferencesUnited States Geological Survey, George Otis Smith, Director; The Pleistocene of Indiana and Michigan and the History of the Great Lakes; Frank Leverett and Frank B. Taylor; Department of the Interior, Monographs of the United States Geological Survey; Volume LIII; Washington; Government Printing Office; 1915

When the retreating ice opened a passage eastward around the north side of the Adirondack Mountains to the basin of Lake Champlain, the lake level fell and the outlet at Rome was abandoned. At this stage the ice barrier or dam rested about on the Frontenac axis of the pre-Cambrian rocks and the lake may therefore be called Lake Frontenac.

See also

References

  1. Richard Foster Flint (November 2008). Glacial Geology and the Pleistocene Epoch. ISBN 978-1-4437-2173-8. Retrieved 2009-09-26.
  2. Occhietti, S.; Anderson, T. W.; Karrow, P. F.; Lewis, M. C.; Mott, R. J.; Parent, M.; Richard, P. J.; Rodrigues, C. G.; Stea, R. (2005). "Glacial Lake Outflow via the St. Lawrence Pathway Prior to the Champlain Sea Invasion and During the Younger Dryas". American Geophysical Union. Bibcode:2005AGUFMPP12A..03O.
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