4.2 Article

The sedimentary record of drifting ice (early Wisconsin Sunnybrook deposit) in an ancestral ice-dammed Lake Ontario, Canada

Journal

QUATERNARY RESEARCH
Volume 63, Issue 2, Pages 171-181

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.yqres.2004.12.002

Keywords

Sunnybrook Till; ice-keel turbation; early Laurentide Ice Sheet

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Outcrops of pebbly mud (diamict) at Scarborough in Southern Ontario, Canada (the so-called Sunnybrook 'Till') are associated with the earliest incursion of the Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS) into mid-continent North America some 45,000 years ago. The Sunnybrook is a blanket-like deposit containing deepwater ostracodes and occurs conformably within a thick (100 m) succession of deltaic and glaciolacustrine facies that record water depth changes in a large proglacial take. Contextual evidence (associated facies, sedimentary structures, deposit geometry and landforms) indicates a low energy depositional setting in an ice-dammed ancestral Lake Ontario in which scouring by floating ice masses was an important process. U-shaped, iceberg-cut scours (with lateral berms) up to 7 m deep, occur on the upper surface of the Sunnybrook and are underlain by 'sub-scour' structures that extend several meters below the scour base. Ice-rafted concentrations of clasts ('clast layers'), grooved surfaces formed by floating ice glissading over a muddy lake floor ('soft sediment striations') and melanges of sand and mud mixed by grounding ice keels ('ice keel turbates') are present and are all well known from modem cold environments. The wider significance of this depositional model is that the LIS margin lay east of Scarborough and did not overrun Southern Ontario. This finding is in agreement with recent data from the Eric Basin of Canada, Ohio, and Indiana where deposits formerly correlated with the Sunnybrook (and thus implying an extensive early Wisconsin ice sheet) are now regarded as Illinoian. A speculative hypothesis is proposed that relates deposition of the Sunnybrook and two younger deposits of similar sedimentology, to surge-like instabilities of the southern LIS margin. (c) 2004 Published by University of Washington.

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