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Comments on “The formation of shear moraines: an example from south Victoria Land, Antarctica”

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 January 2017

Roger LeB. Hooke*
Affiliation:
Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455, U.S.A.
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Abstract

Type
Correspondence
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1968

Sir, Comments on “The formation of shear moraines: an example from south Victoria Land, Antarctica”

I was most interested in the article by Reference SouchezSouchez (1967) as I have spent some time studying the so-called “shear moraines” near Thule in north-west Greenland. My experience in Greenland leads me to wonder about some of the observations of Souchez and to question some of his conclusions.

First, Souchez mentions upwarping of flow lines (foliation planes ?) near the glacier margin. I would be interested to know what causes this upwarping. In Greenland, a similar effect can be observed where active glacial ice tends to over-ride stagnant ice in wind-drift ice wedges (Fig. 1). The ice wedges are so thin that they deform very slowly if at all. More rapidly flowing glacial ice is forced upward by the stagnant wedges and foliation beneath the moraines thus dips steeply up-glacier. The boundary between active ice and ice in the wind-drift wedges is probably marked by a rapid (but not discontinuous) decrease in shear strain downward as indicated schematically by the velocity profile in Figure 1.

Fig. 1. Schematic cross-section of the edge of the Greenland ice sheet near Thule. Morainal material is incorporated into the ice at the base of the glacier and is released at the surface by ablation. Insulation causes morainal deposits to stand above nearby debris-free glacial ice. Debris in the ice is concentrated in bands which constitute foliation bands and which parallel foliation bands defined by differences in bubble content and by other characteristics of the ice alone

Wind-drift wedges have a higher winter accumulation than nearby glacial ice because the wedges are in the lee of moraines and drifting snow blown off the ice sheet accumulates on them. This enables wind-drift wedges to maintain themselves without replenishment by flow of ice from the interior of the ice sheet. It is not clear whether the stagnant ice mentioned by Souchez plays the same role in Antarctica.

Secondly, the debris-containing fault planes described by Souchez are not found in Greenland. Solid dirt bands (with only interstitial ice) are found but these generally parallel nearby foliation that dips up-glacier, These debris bands contain all sizes of material and a few retain evidence of fluvial stratification. Such stratification would probably not be preserved if the blocks were “sheared” into the ice.

Souchez says that his fault planes are parallel to thermal contraction fissures found farther back on the glacier. Because there is morainal material on the ice surface in the area where these cracks develop, it seems pertinent to ask if the debris in the fault planes may not represent crevasse fillings. This would explain the absence of fine material in the fillings, as fines are frequently winnowed out of morainal material that has been on the ice surface for some time.

It should also be noted that the fault planes shown in Souchez’ figure 3 have dips that are rather steep to be accounted for by normal shear deformation, and that offset of the foliation, as shown, is in the wrong direction to be attributed to such shear. Interpreting these features as crevasse fillings might be more consistent with the observations at hand.

Finally, Weertman’s objection to the shear hypothesis is based on the fact that fault-type shear displacements across infinitely thin planes (dV/dy→∞) probably do not occur commonly in ice under high hydrostatic pressure as at the base of an ice sheet. Plastic deformation with finite shear strain (dV/dy finite) is probably the normal mode of flow. Used in this latter sense, the term “shear moraine” is valid. However Reference BishopBishop (1957, p. 17) refers to debris being carried to the surface along “high-angIe imbricate shears”. This implies a fracture or fault type of displacement and the term shear moraine thus has a very explicit genetic connotation. For this reason it seems desirable to abandon the term. I have used the name “ice-perched moraine” in my Greenland work.

Roger leB. Hooke

Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455, U.S.A. 13 December 1967

References

Bishop, B. C. 1957. Shear moraines in the Thule area, northwest Greenland. U.S. Snow, Ice and Permafrost Research Establishment. Research Report 17.Google Scholar
Souchez, R. A. 1967. The formation of shear moraines: an example from south Victoria Land. Antarctica. Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 6, No. 48, p. 83743.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Fig. 1. Schematic cross-section of the edge of the Greenland ice sheet near Thule. Morainal material is incorporated into the ice at the base of the glacier and is released at the surface by ablation. Insulation causes morainal deposits to stand above nearby debris-free glacial ice. Debris in the ice is concentrated in bands which constitute foliation bands and which parallel foliation bands defined by differences in bubble content and by other characteristics of the ice alone