THE VERTICAL DIMENSIONS OF LATE DEVENSIAN GLACIATION ON THE MOUNTAINS OF HARRIS AND SOUTHEAST LEWIS, OUTER HEBRIDES, SCOTLAND

被引:34
作者
BALLANTYNE, CK
MCCARROLL, D
机构
[1] School of Geography and Geology, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, Fife
[2] Department of Geography, University of Wales, Swansea, SA2 8PP, Swansea, Singleton Park
关键词
PERIGLACIAL TRIMLINE; WEATHERING LIMIT; LATE DEVENSIAN; JOINT DEPTHS; GIBBSITE;
D O I
10.1002/jqs.3390100303
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
On North Harris and southeast Lewis a weathering limit separates glacially-moulded bedrock on low ground from frost-shattered bedrock and blockfields on high plateaux. Analysis of the depths of horizontal stress-release joints demonstrates significant contrasts in bedrock weathering above and below this boundary, and the survival of gibbsite only in soils above the weathering limit indicates that it represents the upper limit of Late Devensian glacial erosion. The weathering limit declines regularly in altitude on either side of the former ice shed, and is therefore interpreted as a periglacial trimline defining the upper limit of a locally-nourished ice mass at its maximum extent, rather than a former thermal boundary between protective cold-based and erosive warm-based ice. Calculated basal shear stress values are consistent with this interpretation. The configuration of the trimline indicates that at the last glacial maximum the area supported an ice cap that achieved a maximum altitude of ca. 700 m above present sea level and declined in altitude to the west-northwest and east-southeast at an average gradient of ca. 20 m km(-1). Extrapolation of the dimensions of this ice cap suggests that it terminated ca. 7-10 km west of the present coast of Harris, and was confluent with mainland ice a short distance east of the present coastline.
引用
收藏
页码:211 / 223
页数:13
相关论文
共 69 条
[1]  
Andersen B.G., Late Weichselian ice sheets in Eurasia and Greenland, The Last Great Ice Sheets, pp. 1-65, (1981)
[2]  
Atkinson T.C., Briffa K.R., Coope G.R., Seasonal temperatures in Britain during the past 22,000 years, Nature, 325, pp. 587-592, (1987)
[3]  
Ballantyne C.K., Depths of open joints and the limits of former glaciers, Scottish Journal of Geology, 18, pp. 250-252, (1982)
[4]  
Ballantyne C.K., The Late Quaternary glacial history of the Trotternish Escarpment, Isle of Skye, Scotland, and its implications for ice‐sheet reconstruction, Proceedings of the Geologist's Association, 101, pp. 171-186, (1990)
[5]  
Ballantyne C.K., Gibbsitic soils on former nunataks: implications for ice sheet reconstruction, Journal of Quaternary Science, 9, pp. 73-80, (1994)
[6]  
Ballantyne C.K., Harris C., The Periglaciation of Great Britain, (1994)
[7]  
Boulton G.S., Smith G.D., Jones A.S., Newsome J., Glacial geology and glaciology of the last mid‐latitude ice sheets, Journal of the Geological Society, London, 142, pp. 447-474, (1985)
[8]  
Bowen D.Q., Rose J., McCabe A.M., Sutherland D.G., Correlation of Quaternary glaciations in England, Ireland, Wales and Scotland, Quaternary Science Reviews, 5, pp. 299-340, (1986)
[9]  
Budd W.F., Carter D.B., An analysis of the relation between the surface and bedrock profiles of ice caps, Journal of Glaciology, 10, pp. 197-209, (1971)
[10]  
Campbell J.F., Notes on the glacial phenomena of the Hebrides, Proceedings of the Geological Society, London, 29, pp. 545-548, (1873)