학술논문

Illinoian to late Wisconsinan stratigraphy at Woodbridge, Ontario
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences = Revue Canadienne des Sciences de la Terre. 38(6):921-942
Subject
24|Quaternary geology
algae
Arthropoda
biostratigraphy
boreal environment
Canada
Cenozoic
Chordata
clastic sediments
cores
Crustacea
diatoms
Don Formation
Eastern Canada
Illinoian
Insecta
interglacial environment
interstadial environment
Invertebrata
lithostratigraphy
Mandibulata
microfossils
miospores
Mollusca
Ontario
Ostracoda
paleoclimatology
palynomorphs
periglacial environment
Plantae
Pleistocene
pollen
Quaternary
Scarborough Formation
sediments
terrestrial environment
Thorncliffe Formation
till
Toronto Ontario
upper Pleistocene
upper Wisconsinan
Vertebrata
Wisconsinan
Woodbridge Ontario
Language
English
ISSN
0008-4077
Abstract
Near Woodbridge, northwest of Toronto, Ontario, a 15 metre-high railroad cut and associated borrow pit, first excavated in 1962, exposed a multiple till sequence and intervening fossiliferous sediments. Work over the next 35 years revealed that Illinoian York Till, early Wisconsinan Sunnybrook Till, and late Wisconsinan Humber till, Halton Till, and Wildfield Till are interbedded with fossiliferous sediments equivalent to the Sangamonian Don Formation, early Wisconsinan Scarborough Formation (>50 ka BP), and middle Wisconsinan Thorncliffe Formation (45 ka BP). A complex periglacial record displays multistage fossil frost wedges, indicating intervals of severe climate in late Illinoian and early Wisconsinan time. Cored boreholes indicate deep gravel below and a till on Ordovician shale bedrock (Georgian Bay Formation). Vertebrates, molluscs, ostracodes, insects, and plants (diatoms, wood, seeds, pollen) indicate mostly cool conditions (boreal to tundra) for interstadial sediments. Interglacial conditions are represented by vertebrates, molluscs, and plants above York Till. Many taxa are new to the Quaternary of the Toronto area.