“…The interaction between the Cordilleran and Laurentide ice sheets east of the Rocky Mountains at the LGM has been debated for many decades, with some researchers arguing for the coalescence of the two ice sheets on the westernmost Interior Plains (e.g., Mathews, 1978;Dyke and Prest, 1987;Stumpf et al, 2000;Dyke et al, 2003;Dyke, 2004;Bednarski and Smith, 2007), while others argue that the CIS did not extend over the Rocky Mountains at the local LGM (lLGM) (e.g., Bobrowsky and Rutter, 1992;Catto et al, 1996). Recently, empirical evidence supporting the coalescence of the two ice sheets has grown (Atkinson et al, 2016;Hickin et al, 2016;Hartman et al, 2018), and it is now generally accepted that they coalesced at the lLGM (Fig. 1).…”