4.7 Article

A magnetic fabric study of the origin of englacial debris bands at Flaajokull, Southeast Iceland

Journal

COLD REGIONS SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 217, Issue -, Pages -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.coldregions.2023.104051

Keywords

Debris bands; Anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility; Ice crystal fabrics; Ice rheology

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This study investigates the kinematics of deformation in debris bands associated with an overdeepened basin in Iceland. The research reveals the presence of multiple fabric types, suggesting a complex deformation history. Furthermore, pure shear-dominated strain was observed in an ice-free sediment ridge on the glacier surface.
Two debris bands associated with an overdeepened basin in the terminus region of the Fl ' aajo center dot kull glacier, Iceland, have been sampled for their ice and debris. Here the kinematics of deformation are investigated through anisotropy of magnetic susceptibly (AMS), microstructural analyses, and c-axis preferred orientations. Comparison of the crystallographic orientations of 180 grains and the AMS shape orientations of mineral inclusions in polycrystalline ice reveals a multi-maximum girdle oblique to the planar stratification and a record of near vertical triaxial ellipsoids. These two distinct fabrics can be attributed to both pure and simple shear suggesting a complex deformational history. In addition, AMS from an ice-free sediment ridge on the glacier surface indicates pure shear locally dominated strain. The physical properties of the debris bands, sedimentology and field observations suggest that they were sourced from the glacial bed and emplaced by highly pressurized water into localized fractures.

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