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The influence of J.G. Goodchild

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

G.S. Boulton*
Affiliation:
Grant Institute of Geology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH9 3JW, Scotland
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Abstract

Type
Correspondence
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1988

Sir,

John Reference ShawShaw (1988) is correct in assuming that, unlike him, I do not regard J.G. Goodchild as one of the “grandfathers” of glacial geology, but I certainly do not deny importance to the study of land forms and sediments in inferring past processes.

Reference GoodchildGoodchild’s (1875) descriptions of the glacial sediments of the Vale of Eden are excellent for his time, and are even now a useful guide which helps us in interpreting the origin of these sediments. However, I believe that the inferences which he drew from them are largely incorrect, primarily because of his lack of any real knowledge of actual glacial environments and the consequent need to fall back on imagination alone as the explanatory tool. Though Goodchild cannot be blamed for this lack in 1875, there are many who follow his tradition and who have no excuse to ignore the knowledge of actual physical processes, which has built up since then, in constructing their hypotheses. I fear that the confusion between the real and the hypothetical may be illustrated by John Shaw’s comment that the quote he gives from Goodchild represents an “accurate description” of the formation of melt-out till. It is not a description; it is an imaginative inference, a distinction which is often forgotten by those who do not moderate their inferences from ancient sediments by studies of modern processes. I adhere to the view that, if geological features can be explained equally well by processes which are known to occur and hypothetical processes, the former should be preferred.

I would argue that Goodchild’s view of “under-melting”, also held by Reference CarruthersCarruthers (1953) and many modern glacial geologists, including Shaw, as a widespread process giving rise to thick melt-out tills deposited beneath stagnant ice, is seriously flawed. I would argue that it is thermodynamically improbable, that it requires either excessive erosion rates to load the lower parts of a glacier with sufficient debris or an inexplicable late-stage change in regime, and indeed that the observations which have been used to justify the hypothesis can be explained by recourse to known rather than hypothetical processes. When I originally coined the term melt-out till (Reference BoultonBoulton, 1970), it was observed and inferred to be a much more limited phenomenon and different in its sedimentological associations than Shaw believes it to be.

I take a broader view of sedimentology than John Shaw appears to, when he writes that “direct observation of processes is desirable”, as if it is an optional extra. 1 regard good sedimentology as the integrated study of processes and products on all scales. It is commonly found that the influence of origin from sedimentary product alone is ambiguous, and I would plead with those glacial geologists who do not already do so to take a more holistic view.

G.S. Boulton

Grant Institute of Geology. University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH9 3JW, Scotland

5 July 1988

References

Boulton, G.S. 1970 On the deposition of subglacial and melt–out tills at the margins of certain Svalbard glaciers. J. Glaciol., 9(56), 231245.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carruthers, R.G. 1953 Glacial drifts and the undermelt theory. Newcastle upon Tyne, Harold Hill Ltd.Google Scholar
Goodchild, J.G. 1875 The glacial geology of the Eden Valley and the western part of the Yorkshire–Dale district. Q. J. Geol. Soc. London, 31, 5599.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shaw, J. 1988 The influence of J.G. Goodchild. (Letter.) J. Glaciol. 34(117), 256.CrossRefGoogle Scholar