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Till and moraine emplacement in a deforming bed surge - an example from a marine environment
Authors:G.S. Boulton  J.J.M. Van Der Meer  J. Hart  D. Beets  G.H.J. Ruegg  F.M. Van Der Wateren  J. Jarvis
Affiliation:aDepartment of Geology and Geophysics, Grant Institute, Kings Buildings, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, U.K.;bFysisch Geografisch en Bodemkundig Laboratorium, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands;cDepartment of Geography, University of Southampton, Southampton, U.K.;dRijks Geologisch Dienst, Haarlem, The Netherlands;eInstituut voor Aardwetenschappen, Free University, Amsterdam, The Netherlands;fDepartment of Geography, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, U.K.
Abstract:The glacier Sefstrombreen in Spitsbergen surged across an arm of the sea between 1882 and 1886 and rode up onto the island Coraholmen. Marine and terrestrial geological observations and archive records show that the glacier advanced on a deforming carpet of marine mud which was eroded from its original location, transported, and smeared over the sea bed and Coraholmen as a deformation till. The glacier emplaced about 2108M3 (0.2 km3) of drift in the terminal 2 km of its advance in a maximum of 14 years, leaving a thickness of up to 20 m on Coraholmen, which was doubled in size as a result.During the surge, subglacial muds were characterised by high water pressures, low effective pressures and low frictional resistance to glacier movement. Original sedimentary inhomogenities permit fold structures to be identified, but repeated refolding and progressive remoulding produce mixing and homogenisation of deformation tills.The surge was probably shortlived, and as the heavily crevassed glacier stagnated, underlying water saturated muds were intruded into crevasses and then extruded on the glacier surface. Reticulate “crevasse-intrusion” ridges on Coraholmen and the sea floor reflect the orientation of surge generated crevasses. Water and sediment was also extruded beyond the glacier at its maximum extent, to form extensive flows producing “till tongues” both on Coraholmen and the sea floor extending over 1.3 km from the glacier.It is argued that subglacial deformation of pre-existing sediment will almost invariably be associated with glaciation of marine areas and that this process will not only produce deformation tills through remoulding of pre-existing sediments, but will also play a fundamental role in glacier dynamics. Criteria which permit glacial tills produced by such events from marine and glaciomarine muds are discussed.
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