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Yukon River: Evidence for extensive migration during the holocene transgression

January 1, 1973

The shift of the Yukon River, during the Holocene sea-level transgression, from south of Nunivak Island during the Wisconsin maximum to its present location (a distance greater than 300 kilometers) is indicated by remanent channels, distinct subbottom structures, deltaic sediments, and anomalous rates of sediment accumulation on the continental shelf of the east-central Bering Sea. These features were produced as the ancestral river migrated northward across the easternmost part of this area before 11,000 years ago.

Publication Year 1973
Title Yukon River: Evidence for extensive migration during the holocene transgression
Authors H. J. Knebel, J.S. Creager
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Science
Index ID 70011040
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse