Title of article :
Ice-walled-lake plains: Implications for the origin of hummocky glacial topography in middle North America
Author/Authors :
Clayton، نويسنده , , Lee and Attig، نويسنده , , John W. and Ham، نويسنده , , Nelson R. and Johnson، نويسنده , , Mark D. and Jennings، نويسنده , , Carrie E. and Syverson، نويسنده , , Kent M.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
Ice-walled-lake plains are prominent in many areas of hummocky-till topography left behind as the Laurentide Ice Sheet melted from middle North America. The formation of the hummocky-till topography has been explained by: (1) erosion by subglacial floods; (2) squeezing of subglacial till up into holes in stagnant glacial ice; or (3) slumping of supraglacial till. The geomorphology and stratigraphy of ice-walled-lake plains provide evidence that neither the lake plains nor the adjacent hummocks are of subglacial origin. These flat lake plains, up to a few kilometers in diameter, are perched as much as a few tens of meters above surrounding depressions. They typically are underlain by laminated, fine-grained suspended-load lake sediment. Many ice-walled-lake plains are surrounded by a low rim ridge of coarser-grained shore sediment or by a steeper rim ridge of debris that slumped off the surrounding ice slopes. The ice-walled lakes persisted for hundreds to thousands of years following glacial stagnation. Shells of aquatic molluscs from several deposits of ice-walled-lake sediment in south-central North Dakota have been dated from about 13 500 to 10 500 B.P. (calibrated radiocarbon ages), indicating a climate only slightly cooler than present. This is confirmed by recent palaeoecological studies in nearby non-glacial sites. To survive so long, the stagnant glacial ice had to be well-insulated by a thick cover of supraglacial sediment, and the associated till hummocks must be composed primarily of collapsed supraglacial till.
Keywords :
Ice-walled-lake plain , Glacial hummocks , supraglacial debris , Pleistocene–Holocene Transition
Journal title :
Geomorphology
Journal title :
Geomorphology