“…Glacial dipsticks have been instrumental in constraining the thinning history of ice sheets in Scandinavia (Brook et al, 1996;Goehring et al, 2008), Antarctica (Stone et al, 2003;Ackert et al, 2007;Mackintosh et al, 2007Mackintosh et al, , 2011Johnson et al, 2014), and Greenland (Corbett et al, 2011;Nelson et al, 2014). Strikingly, other than our own recent study at Acadia National Park in Maine (Koester et al, 2017), no major glacial dipsticks have been measured for the Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS), which was the largest body of ice at the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), accounting for ~65-90 of the 130 m LGM sea level lowstand . There are only two regions where substantial topographic relief (>1000 m) was uncovered by LIS retreat during the last deglaciation -the mountains of New England and southern Quebec (Fig.…”