ABSTRACT
The Kenyon Island Group lies within the Great Sacandaga Lake's
largest and most unnavigable shallow water shoal. The shoal
measures approximately 5.0 mi2. The Kenyon Islands,
including Mead and Deer Islands, occupy approximately 3/4 mi2
during the months of annual high lake level. During the late
shallow water season of 1998, a NE to SW diagonal transect of nine
core samples were collected by a Geoprobe coring device, with
recoveries between 8' and 16' deep sections. In this study these
cores were used to identify the stratigraphy, classify the
sediment grain sizes, evaluate the abundance of economic minerals,
and calculate the most cost effective and environmentally sound
method of deepening the lakebed for navigation and recreational
purposes and reconfiguring the new real property created.
Here I present evidence for the existence of a previously
unidentified large moraine field, of approximately 12 mi2,
located between two different end moraines of the Pleistocene
Epoch. Today, about 1/3 of that moraine field surrounds the Kenyon
Island Group, within the shorelines of the Great Sacandaga Lake.
The south and east end moraine is visible in an arcuate path which
includes the two major Kenyon Islands and Deer Island. The south
and east end moraine is approximately 3/4 mile wide and is
confined by the valley walls of the Sacandaga Basin. This end
moraine must have been at least 300 feet high during the
Pleistocene Epoch. The north and west moraine was deposited before
the south and east end moraine and is also visible in exposures
around the lake. This forms moraine rock fields in arcuate bands,
which are confined by the valley walls of the Sacandaga Basin. The
north and west end moraine was originally 1/2 miles wide and must
have stood at least 120 feet high.
The moraine field contains all the classic landmarks including
kames, kettle lakes, eskers, drumlins, flutes and fossil
streambeds. The moraine field sediments that exist are no more
than 45 feet thick beneath the lakebed and 45 to 120 feet thick
outside the shorelines and above bedrock. The bedrock maybe
Cambrian, including Little Falls Dolomite, Theresa Dolomite and/or
Potsdam Sandstone.
This thesis proposes a remedy involving dredging and earth-moving
heavy equipment to permanently deepen part of the lakebed of the
Great Sacandaga Lake that is currently of little use because the
area is typically too shallow for regular lake navigation. If
there are minerals within the sediments of the study area that are
of current economic importance and have values significant enough
to pay for a lakebed deepening, the geochemistry, mineralogy and
mineral chemistry will reveal them. These minerals can then be
identified and evaluated as the mechanism that will support the
tremendous costs associated with such a major deepening effort.
The long term outcome of a Great Sacandaga Lake deepening, beside
improving the navigational, recreational, and fisheries of the
lake will create room for an additional 200 billion gallons of
water, which could be priceless in the next frontier.
The moraine field sediment profile in the study area may be unique
to the whole of the Great Sacandaga Lake. The question of dredging
the lakebed versus simpler earth-moving heavy equipment to
reconfigure the lakebed, anywhere else in the Great Sacandaga
Lake, will most certainly require further research and could yield
different results.
Ambrosino, A.M., 2001. Sediment characteristics around the Kenyon
Island Group, Great Sacandaga Lake (NY): economic potential of
dredging and land reclamation. Unpublished MSc. thesis, State
University of New York at Albany. 194 pp., +x
University at Albany Science Library call number: SCIENCE
Oversize (*) QE 40 Z899 2001 A43
thesis (scanned
text) - 25.6MB pdf file
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