The mass of ice from the continental ice sheets had depressed the rock beneath it over millennia. At the end of the last glacial period, while the rock was still depressed, the Saint Lawrence and Ottawa River valleys, as well as modern Lake Champlain, at that time Lake Vermont, were below sea level and flooded with rising worldwide sea levels, once the ice no longer prevented the ocean from flowing into the region.[5] As the land gradually rose again, in the process known as isostatic rebound, the sea coast gradually retreated to its current location.
The sea lasted from about 13,000 years ago to about 10,000 years ago and was continuously shrinking during that time, since the rebounding continent was slowly rising above sea level. At its peak, the sea extended inland as far south as Lake Champlain and somewhat farther west than the city of Ottawa, Ontario, and farther up the Ottawa River past Pembroke.[6] At one time Glacial Lake Iroquois became an arm of the Champlain Sea called Gilbert Gulf.[7] The remaining glaciers fed the sea during that time, making it more brackish than typical seawater. It is estimated that the sea was as much as 150 metres (490 ft) above the level of today's Saint Lawrence and Ottawa Rivers.[6]
Geological evidence
The best evidence of this former sea is the vast clay plain deposited along the Ottawa and St. Lawrence Rivers.[8] This resulted in distinctive forest types,[9] and large wetlands. Other modern evidence of the sea can be seen in the form of fossils of whales (belugas, fin whales,[10] and bowhead whales), walruses and other pinnipeds,[11][12] and marine shells[13] that have been found near the cities of Ottawa, Ontario, and Montreal, Quebec. There are also fossils of oceanic fish such as capelin.[14] The Sea also left ancient raised shorelines in the former coastal regions, and the Leda clay deposits in areas of deeper water.[15]
^ abBarnett, P. J. 1988. "History of the northwestern arm of the Champlain Sea". pp. 25–36 in Gadd, N.R. (ed.) The Late Quaternary Development of the Champlain Sea Basin. Geological Association of Canada, Special Paper 36. Map 5.
^Chapman, L.J. and D.F. Putnam. 1984. The Physiography of Southern Ontario. Third edition. Ontario Geological Survey, Special Volume No.2. Government of Ontario, Toronto.
^Keddy, C.J. 1993. Forest History of Eastern Ontario. A report prepared for the Eastern Ontario Forest Group.
^McAllister, D.E., C.R. Harrington, S.L. Cumbaa, and C.B. Renaud. 1988. "Paleoenvironmental and biogeographic analyses of fossil fishes in peri-Champlain Sea deposits in Eastern Canada". Pp 241–258 in Gadd, N.R. (ed.) The Late Quaternary Development of the Champlain Sea Basin. Geological Association of Canada, Special Paper 36.