Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4736023 | Quaternary Science Reviews | 2009 | 14 Pages |
Evidence is presented for cold-based glacial erosion, deposition and deformation from the Allan Hills, South Victoria Land, Antarctica. Different erosional features such as scrapes, striae and grooves, depositional features including till, isolated boulders and ice-cored debris cones and three scales of glaciotectonism resulting from cold-based glacial advance are described, and conceptual models are presented based on these observations and those of advancing cold-based glaciers elsewhere. The models entail: (i) ice block apron overriding and entrainment, and (ii) ice-bed separation leading to the formation of a cavity on the down-glacier side of escarpments. The models are most applicable to a horizontally stratified, lithified sedimentary bedrock substrate, but our criteria may assist in correctly interpreting features such as boulder trains, modified bedrock tors and complex cosmogenic exposure histories which have been noted in several regions that may have experienced cold-based glaciation during Pleistocene glacial maxima.