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Lakes of North America

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Lakes abound in North America. Most of them are products of glaciation, which has had a vast effect on the continental drainage pattern—notably by widening the passes through the northern Appalachians and the Cordilleras and by forming big lakes in ice-deepened basins. The Great Lakes proper have a fascinating history, as Lakes Superior and Huron were vast synclinal depressions even in Precambrian times. In place of the present eastern lower Great Lakes (Erie and Ontario), a scarp-and-vale topography existed, with the high front of the Niagara limestone scarp separating vales of shale to the west and east. The glaciers preferentially flowed down the vales and synclines and greatly deepened them into ice-cut basins, where water gathered; as the ice melted away, the Great Lakes formed. While the ice front of the glaciers was blocking the St. Lawrence outlet, the early lakes drained southward into the Mississippi-Ohio, the Susquehanna, and the Mohawk-Hudson systems. When the ice retreated from the Gulf of St. Lawrence, the lakes sought the lower outlet through the St. Lawrence River, decreasing the level of the Great Lakes and leaving beaches around them that stand out as raised beaches, or strandlines. The land, depressed under the enormous weight of the ice, has been rising since, lifting the old beaches above the present diminished bodies of water. Similar strandlines follow the Gulf of St. Lawrence, once under glacial Lake Champlain; Lake Winnipeg, once part of the immense glacial Lake Agassiz; and Lake Athabasca and Great Slave and Great Bear lakes, which also are the relics of once deeper and larger glacial lakes. The western lakes were formed by ice blocking the free drainage of water to Hudson Bay or the Beaufort Sea. Farther south, in the Great Basin, a pluvial (rainy) period of climate during the Pleistocene, matching the ice age in the north, gave rise to the enormous Lakes Lahontan and Bonneville. The Great Salt Lake is a relic of Lake Bonneville, the ancient strandlines of which are up to 1,000 feet (300 metres) above the present shoreline. Similarly, present-day Lake Chapala in Mexico represents only a small portion of the large body of water that accumulated on the Mexican Plateau and whose level fluctuated during several pluvial periods. The contribution of all these lakes—and many more—to the drainage of North America has been outstanding. Much of the relatively flat Canadian Shield is so riddled with lakes and swamps as to form an amphibious landscape.

Rivers

The river regimes of North America exhibit great variety. Northward-flowing rivers—such as the Yukon, Mackenzie, Red River of the North, and Nelson and the rivers of eastern Canada—freeze in winter. Because their upper courses then thaw before the lower sections are free of ice, their lower (northern) reaches frequently flood, especially if the thaw is late enough to coincide with early summer rains. The St. Lawrence runs high in spring and early summer, because any winter precipitation in its drainage basin falls on a frozen surface and serves to heighten runoff during the spring thaw.

The Mississippi system also is frequently swollen in spring as melting snows in the upper parts of the drainage basin are added to runoff from spring rains in the southern Great Plains and southeastern states; flooding can then become a major hazard. River water is kept high by the rains that tropical gulf air and local convection storms bring until midsummer. A marked falloff then occurs, giving way to full flow in late autumn and winter as polar continental air reactivates mid-continental storm tracks. Most other eastern rivers have two periods of high water, occurring in early summer and late winter.

In the American Southwest, winter is the main period of flooding, as rivers dwindle appreciably in summer. The northern Pacific region, by contrast, has rain in all seasons, though with a winter maximum. In the southern tropical regions, rivers have a much more regular regime, running full throughout the year, except in the dry rain-shadow areas leeward of the mountains.

Soils

Before 1960, climate was the main basis used for categorizing soils, with a division first into humid and arid groups and then into subgroups according to the way in which temperature and moisture acted together to produce different horizons (layers) in the soil. Since then, soil classification has come to depend on the unique characteristics of soils and their horizons. The current system of soil classification, called soil taxonomy, involves hierarchical groupings of soils based on strictly defined types of horizons, temperature, colour, drainage or wetness, chemistry, and mineralogy. Twelve major categories of soils have been identified, all of which can be found in various parts of North America. Most of these still can be placed into two broad groupings that reflect their general vegetation cover: forest soils and grassland, desert, and tundra soils.

Forest soils

Forest soils are widespread in North America and typically occur in humid regions.

Spodosols

The cool temperate climatic zone is characterized by spodosols, which typically form on sandy materials under coniferous or mixed coniferous and deciduous forest. They are easily recognized by a leached, acid, grayish white horizon near the surface and a dark, brown to black subsoil B horizon. Relatively infertile because of deep leaching of otherwise nutrient-poor sands, spodosols are best left to forest or to crops that prefer acid conditions, such as potatoes and hay. They extend under the taiga (boreal forest) from Alaska to Newfoundland.

Andisols

Only since about 1989 have andisols been recognized as a distinct soil category. Andisols are formed in volcanic ash and are found throughout the tectonically active belt of the Cascades and north into Canada. There, layers of ash have accumulated and formed these highly fertile, though easily eroded, black soils.

Alfisols

Alfisols are found in the warm-summer subregion of the cool temperate zone, primarily in the Laurentian mixed-forest vegetation region. They are characterized by an upper horizon leached of iron and aluminum compounds, humus, and clay. These materials accumulate in the subsoil, where they form a reddish, clayey subsoil. Alfisols are the moderately fertile, grayish brown soils so typical of the glaciated parts of the northeastern United States; large parts of the dairy regions of Wisconsin and New York are centred on these soils, as is much of the fertile Ohio valley.

Ultisols

Bright red and yellowish red ultisols occur south of the glaciated areas, extending southward from the Ohio valley and Chesapeake Bay to the Gulf Coastal Plain. They correspond to the area of the southeastern mesothermal climate, which has a long growing season and rainfall of up to 60 inches (1,500 mm) per year. Deep leaching and great age have resulted in the loss of many of the essential nutrients from these soils; heavy fertilization is required for such typical crops as tobacco, cotton, soybeans, and corn (maize). Because many ultisol areas of the southern United States have been in row-crop tillage for several centuries, severe erosion has resulted, further limiting their productivity.

Oxisols

The tropical climates of southern coastal Mexico and Central America, with constantly high temperatures from the mid-60s to the low 80s °F (about 18 to 28 °C) and perennial rainfall of 80 to 120 inches (2,000 to 3,000 mm), have caused intense weathering. The resulting soils, called oxisols, are deep red in colour, are infertile, and may even harden irreversibly into bricklike laterite after being drained and cultivated. In these soils, red iron and aluminum hydroxide and sesquioxide compounds, the residual products of rock decay, have accumulated. Deep and strongly acidic, these lateritic soils support primarily grazing and pastoral activities or swidden agriculture.