4.2 Article

Regional subglacial quarrying and abrasion below hard-bedded palaeo-ice streams crossing the Shield-Palaeozoic boundary of central Canada: the importance of substrate control

Journal

BOREAS
Volume 50, Issue 3, Pages 781-805

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/bor.12522

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. NERC [bgs06006] Funding Source: UKRI

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The passage discusses the use of high-resolution LiDAR data to generate three-dimensional surface visualization models, offering insights into the erosional processes under Late Wisconsin palaeo-ice streams in central Ontario. It highlights the differences in the effects of different substrate types on subglacial processes, emphasizing the efficiency of fast flowing ice in stripping limestone cover rocks from Precambrian basement and potentially impacting the formation of large lake basins.
Three-dimensional surface visualization models derived from high-resolution LiDAR data provide new information about the type and scale of erosional processes below Late Wisconsin palaeo-ice streams traversing the boundary between Canadian Shield crystalline rocks with offlapping Palaeozoic limestones in central Ontario. The hard bed is directly analogous to that found below ice streams in East Antarctica and East Greenland and provides insight into the effects of abrupt changes in substrate type on subglacial processes. Erosion of hard crystalline Canadian Shield rock was largely ineffectual consisting of areal abrasion of rounded whalebacks and local lee side plucking. In contrast, fast flow over the strike of gently dipping well-bedded and jointed Palaeozoic limestones cut large flow-parallel grooves and ridges akin to mega-scale glacial lineations reflecting intense abrasion below narrow streams of subglacial debris dominated by hard crystalline Shield clasts (erodents). Regionally extensive plucking of structurally weak, well-jointed and bedded limestone produced large volumes of rubbly carbonate debris leaving a 25-km-wide belt of uncontrolled hummocky rubble terrain (long known as the Dummer Moraine in Southern Ontario) some 350 km long and locally as much as 10 m thick. Subglacial plucking and abrasion under fast flowing ice were highly effective in stripping limestone cover rocks from Precambrian basement, and over many glacial cycles, may have played a role in the location and excavation of numerous large and deep lake basins around the Shield-Palaeozoic boundary zone in North America.

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