“…Significantly, these loess deposits serve as the parent material for some of the most productive agricultural soils in North America (Fehrenbacher et al, 1986;Catt, 2001). A more precise understanding of the chronology of Peoria Silt deposition, along meltwater valleys segments with contrasting glacial history, is important for providing context to studies of paleoclimate (Muhs et al, 2013;Conroy et al, 2019), terrestrial gastropod fossils (Baker, 1936;Leonard and Frye, 1960;Grimley et al, 2020), mammalian fossils (Treworgy et al, 2007;Saunders et al, 2010), loess-stratigraphy correlations (Frye et al, 1968;Mason et al, 2007), soil genesis (Ruhe, 1984;Muhs et al, 2001), archaeology (Van Nest, 1993), and soil chronosequences (Schumacher et al, 1987). Geochronology can also help determine the extent to which loess deposition is connected with the geologic history and fluctuations of sediment-rich glacial lobes of the southern Laurentide Ice Sheet (Curry, 1998;Grimley, 2000;Ullman et al, 2015;Curry et al, 2018;Heath et al, 2018;Dendy et al, 2021) or to what extent loess accumulation is driven directly by climatic change (Wang et al, 2000;Muhs et al, 2013).…”