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Glacier-Bed Landforms of the Prairie Region of North America

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 January 2017

S. R. Moran
Affiliation:
Geology Division, Alberta Research Council, 11315 87th Avenue, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2C2, Canada
Lee Clayton
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, University of North Dakota, Grand Forks, North Dakota 58202, U.S.A.
R. LeB. Hooke
Affiliation:
Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of Minnesota, 108 Pillsbury Hall, 310 Pillsbury Drive S.E., Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455, U.S.A.
M. M. Fenton
Affiliation:
Geology Division, Alberta Research Council, 11315 87th Avenue, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2C2, Canada
L. D. Andriashek
Affiliation:
Geology Division, Alberta Research Council, 11315 87th Avenue, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2C2, Canada
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Abstract

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Two major types of terrain that formed at or near the bed of Pleistocene continental ice sheets are widespread throughout the prairie region of Canada and the United States. These are (1) glacial-thrust blocks and source depressions and (2) streamlined terrain.

Glacial-thrust terrain formed where the glacier was frozen to the substrate and where elevated pore-water pressure decreased the shear strength of the substrate to a value less than that applied by the glacier. The marginal zone of ice sheets consisted of a frozen-bed zone, no more than 2 to 3 km wide in places, within which glacial-thrust blocks are large and angular. Up-glacier from this zone the thrust blocks are generally smaller and smoothed. Streamlined terrain begins 2 to 3 km behind known ice-margin positions and extends tens of kilometres up-glacier. Streamlined terrain formed in two ways: (1) erosion of the substrate as a consequence of basal sliding in the sub-marginal thawed-bed zone and (2) erosional smoothing accompanied by emplacement of till in the lee of thrust blocks where they were deposited and subsequently exposed to thawed-bed conditions as a result of further advance of the glacier.

This paper has been accepted for publication in full in a future issue of the Journal of Glaciology.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1979