“…Limnological studies in the eastern Canadian and American prairies have broadened the understanding of the deglacial history of the Northern Great Plains (Last, 1982(Last, , 1983(Last, , 1999Last et al, 1994;Last, 1981, 1983) and on Holocene climatic changes (Henderson and Last, 1999;Tackman et al, 1999;Todd et al, 1999aTodd et al, , 1999b, particularly with respect to aridity (Anderson et al, 1993;Bradbury and Dean, 1993;Bradbury and Dietrich-Rurup, 1993;Brugam, 1993;Lemmen and Vance, 1999;Nuhfer et al, 1999;Whitlock et al, 1999). Only a handful of studies, however, have documented recent changes during the last few centuries, dealing with eutrophication (Burbidge and Schröder-Adams, 1998;Torigai et al, 2000), shoreline submergence (Nielsen, 1999), vegetation change from tall grass prairie to agricultural landscape (Brooks and Grenier, 2001;Jacobson and Engstrom, 1989) and increased sedimentation (Brooks and Grenier, 2001;De Boer, 1994;Shapley et al, 2005).…”