EGU24-20637, updated on 11 Mar 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-20637
EGU General Assembly 2024
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Tweedsmuir Glacier, Alsek River, and the salmon migration that wasn’t

Dan Shugar1, Gwenn Flowers2, Derek Cronmiller3, Laurent Mingo4, Al von Finster5, and Meghan Sharp6
Dan Shugar et al.
  • 1University of Calgary, Water, Sediment, Hazards, and Earth-surface Dynamics (waterSHED) Lab, Earth, Energy, and Environment, Calgary, Canada (daniel.shugar@ucalgary.ca)
  • 2Department of Earth Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Canada
  • 3Yukon Geological Survey, Canada
  • 4Blue System Integration, Canada
  • 5Whitehore, Yukon, Canada
  • 6Ocean, Earth, and Atmospheric Sciences, Oregon State University, USA

Sockeye salmon are an important species both ecologically as well as culturally. At some point in the recent geological past, as substantiated by Indigenous oral history and ecological data, sockeye would migrate up Alsek River through the St Elias Mountains into southwest Yukon. But they no longer do so, and river-blocking surges of Nàłùdäy (Lowell Glacier), which translates to ‘Fish Stop’, have been blamed. During multiple surges over the past few thousand years, Nàłùdäy impounded massive glacial lakes, which drained catastrophically and transported vast quantities of gravel and boulders downstream. Although Nàłùdäy has not blocked Alsek River since the late 1800s, sockeye have yet to recolonize this stretch of the river. In this study, we suggest a recent advance of Tweedsmuir Glacier, about 65 km downstream of Nàłùdäy, caused Alsek River to carve the narrow Turnback Canyon into bedrock. This canyon, which stretches for ~10 km along the glacier’s terminus and in places is only a few metres wide, produces a functionally insurmountable velocity barrier to upstream fish migration. The ultimate goal of the study is to determine whether Alsek River was rerouted in the recent geological past, cutting off the sockeye salmon migration. Our specific objectives are to (1) determine whether an ancestral paleochannel of Alsek River exists beneath Tweedsmuir Glacier; (2) establish the chronology of canyon incision and determine whether it was related to rapid drainage of ice-dammed lakes at Nàłùdäy; and (3) evaluate whether the subglacial topography may be conducive to Alsek River abandoning Turnback Canyon as the glacier retreats, creating a gentler stretch of river allowing fish to reach upstream habitat.

 

Between 2019 and 2022, we collected more than 450 line-km of airborne and ground-based ice-penetrating radar data over the lower glacier to map the subglacial topography with the intent of determining whether a paleochannel might exist up which sockeye may have traveled prior to Neoglacial advances. Results suggest that the terminal lobe of Tweedsmuir Glacier is up to ~500 m thick and in some places the bed is up to ~100 m below sea level. Based on preliminary analyses of the radar data, it is conceivable that Alsek River could abandon Turnback Canyon for the lower elevation terrain, as the glacier retreats in the coming decades and centuries. Terrestrial cosmogenic nuclide dating of the canyon walls using 36Cl suggests that the canyon was cut within the last thousand years, and very quickly, possibly in a single episode of downcutting.

How to cite: Shugar, D., Flowers, G., Cronmiller, D., Mingo, L., von Finster, A., and Sharp, M.: Tweedsmuir Glacier, Alsek River, and the salmon migration that wasn’t, EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-20637, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-20637, 2024.