Slate Islands (Ontario)

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Slate Islands Provincial Park
IUCN category II (national park)
284px
McGreevy Harbour, Slate Islands, was once used as a staging area for logs during the logging boom of the 1930s
Map showing the location of Slate Islands Provincial Park
Map showing the location of Slate Islands Provincial Park
Location Ontario, Canada
Nearest city Terrace Bay, Ontario
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Area 65.70 km2 (25.37 sq mi)
Established 1985
Governing body Ontario Parks

The Slate Islands archipelago is formed of two main islands, five minor islands and numerous islets located in northern Lake Superior, Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1851: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value). south of the town of Terrace Bay. The islands were created by a meteorite impact which formed a crater about 32 km (20 mi) wide.[1] In 1985, the Ontario government established the Slate Islands as a natural environment provincial park. The islands are notable for having Ontario's largest herd of boreal woodland caribou.[2]

The total surface area is about 36 square kilometres (14 sq mi). The nearby Leadman Group of islands Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1851: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value). east is often considered part of the Slate Islands.

Flora

File:Saxifraga paniculata, Slate Islands.jpg
Saxifraga paniculata, growing at Williams Point in the Slate Islands

The cooling effect of Lake Superior makes the Slate Islands a particularly harsh habitat for its latitude. As a result, islands harbour arctic and alpine plant species such as alpine chickweed (at its most southerly occurrence),[3] Dryas drummondii (not found again for 1600 km (1000 mi) north),[3] and alpine bistort, an Inuit delicacy eaten with seal oil.[2] These arctic disjuncts are reminders of ice ages and associated tundra conditions in this area in the past.

Fauna

The islands are home to woodland caribou which have been studied extensively from 1974 to today by Dr. A.T. (Tom) Bergerud. The caribou are a classic example of island biogeography in action; the islands are notable for species that are absent but present on the adjacent mainland (red squirrel, moose, white-tailed deer, and grouse). No ungulates were present on the islands until the caribou arrived in the early 1900s. And, no predators of caribou were (or are currently) present. Caribou reached the highest population density in the world on the islands before the 1990s, with the herd estimated at 650 animals.[4] After a food shortage and die-off in 1990, the numbers were reduced to about 100.[4] In 2012 there are about 200 caribou on the Slate Islands.[5] Wolves reached the archipelago in the early 1990s preying heavily on the caribou but for reasons not entirely known they disappeared a few years later.

Other mammals found on the islands include beaver, muskrat, snowshoe hare, short-tailed weasel, red-backed vole, and red fox.

The waters surrounding the Slate Islands have been protected from commercial fishing to preserve one of the last native stocks of lake trout in Lake Superior. The Islands have been a source of lake trout brood stock used at the Dorion Fish Hatchery, and fingerlings are planted back to Lake Superior to restore the fishery.

Human history

Human sites have been found on the islands dating to about 1000CE.[6]

A lighthouse was built on Patterson Island, the largest island, in 1903 to help ships locate the harbour at the nearby town of Jackfish, Ontario. The island is named after William Patterson, a former lieutenant-governor of Saskatchewan. Later, a fishing station was built on McColl Island.

The original forests on the islands were modified by logging and forest fires. Up until the 1940s, the islands were used to stockpile boomed logs from the mainland Lake Superior north shore for export on lake freighters to pulp mills in the United States.

In 1985, the Slate Islands were protected as an Ontario Natural Environment Provincial Park. There are no facilities and the islands can only be accessed via boat or airplane. The islands remoteness is enforced by almost 9 km of open, wild, Lake Superior water and its distance from any large communities. It is frequented by naturalists, fishing parties, sailors exploring this Great Lake, and recently by an increasing number of sea kayaking parties.

Geology

Approximately 9 m (30 ft) tall shatter cone located in McGreevy Harbour, Slate Islands
File:Middle Ordovician craters.jpg
North American Middle Ordovician impact craters, which may be part of the Ordovician meteor event. Key: 1: Ames crater, 2: Decorah crater, 3: Rock Elm Disturbance, 4: Slate Islands crater.

The Slate Islands mark the centre of a large meteorite impact crater. The original crater rim is estimated at about 32 km (20 mi) in diameter, but this and most of the crater has subsequently eroded away, leaving the islands which are interpreted as a central uplift. The age of the impact event is estimated to be about 450 million years (Ordovician).[7][8] Another source estimates the age at 800-500 million years (late Proterozoic to early Paleozoic).[9] It may be one of several Middle Ordovician meteors that fell roughly simultaneously 469 million years ago, part of a proposed Ordovician meteor event, including the Decorah crater in Iowa, the Ames crater in Oklahoma, and the Rock Elm crater in Wisconsin.[10]

The islands are not made of slate; the rock is mainly of metamorphosed volcanic rocks greater than 2.7 billion years old. Also present are sedimentary rocks of the Rove and Gunflint formations, approximately 1.85-2.10 billion years old. There is evidence that about 1.1 billion years ago, there was volcanic centre on Paterson Island, however almost all volcanic rocks have been removed by erosion.[11]

The youngest rocks are diatremes, referring to breccia-filled volcanic pipes that were formed by gaseous explosions. They occur as dikes or sills which criss-cross the all older rocks types.[11]

Also located in the islands are good examples of shatter cones, rare geological features formed in bedrock by the high velocity shock waves created by meteorite impacts. They have a distinctively conical shape with thin grooves (striae) that radiate from the top (apex) of the cone. The Slate Islands are home to a shatter cone measuring 9 m (30 ft), one of the largest examples in the world (pictured here).

Allogenic breccia is present, notably on the east and north sides of the islands.

References

  1. Sharpton, Dressler, (1996), p. 1177
  2. 2.0 2.1 Chisholm & Gutsche 1998, p. 180.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Pye (1997), p. 83
  4. 4.0 4.1 Godwin (1996), p. 3
  5. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  6. Chisholm & Gutsche 1998, p. 178.
  7. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  8. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  9. Sharpton, Dressler, (1996), p. 1178
  10. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  11. 11.0 11.1 Pye (1997), p. 84

Bibliography

  • Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  • Pye, E.G. (1997). Roadside Geology of Ontario: North Shore of Lake Superior, Ontario GEOservices Centre, ROCK ON Series 2. ISBN 0-7778-5850-9
  • Sharpton, V.L. and Dressler, B.O. 'The Slate Islands Impact Structure: Structural Interpretation and Age Constraints', Lunar and Planetary Science. March 1996: vol. 27
  • Godwin, L. (February 1996) "Woodland Caribou in Northwestern Ontario - Why they are different...", Northwestern Ontario Boreal Forest Management Technical Note TN-07

External links