4.6 Article

The first stages of erosion by ice sheets: Evidence from central Europe

Journal

GEOMORPHOLOGY
Volume 123, Issue 3-4, Pages 349-363

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2010.08.008

Keywords

Preglacial inheritance; Granite; Glacial erosion; Inselberg; Roche moutonnee; Grus

Funding

  1. Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland
  2. University of Wroclaw [2024/W]

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In almost all former and presently glaciated areas of the world, glaciers have modified or even transformed pre-glacial terrain during the many cold stages of the Pleistocene. In consequence, the early stages in the development of glacial landscapes have been overprinted or erased by later phases of erosion. The Sudetes in central Europe provide exceptional opportunities to examine the inception of glacial erosion. Evidence of a long geomorphic evolution before glaciation, with the development of etch surfaces, deep weathering covers and the preservation of Neogene kaolinitic sediments, provides a direct analogue to other lowland crystalline terrains as existed immediately prior to Pleistocene glaciation. Large granite intrusions exist in the Sudetes and its Foreland that support hills that range in size from small tors to large domes. These terrains experienced only thin ice cover for short periods when the Scandinavian ice sheet reached its Pleistocene maximum limits in Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 12 (Elsterian) at 440-430 ka and MIS 8 (Early Saalian) at 250-240 ka. In each of four study areas beyond, at and within the limits of glaciation we have mapped Glacial Erosion Indicators, glacial landform assemblages that indicate progressive glacial modification of the pre-glacial granite terrain. We find that glacial erosion increases with distance from the ice margin, due to greater ice thickness and longer ice cover, but has had only limited impact. On hills, regolith was stripped by moving ice, tors were demolished, and blocks were entrained. However, indicators of more advanced glacial erosion, such as lee-side cliffs and glacial streamlining, are absent, even from granite domes that lay beneath similar to 500 m of ice. The survival of tors beneath ice cover and the removal of tor superstructure by glacial erosion are confirmed. The presence of glacially-modified tors in areas covered only by Elsterian ice implies that the tors existed before 440 ka. Moreover, the contrast between blockfield-covered slopes found above Elsterian and Saalian glacial trimlines on summits of granite, gabbro and basalt hills in the Sudetic Foreland and glacially-stripped surfaces at lower elevations implies only limited regeneration of blockfields since 430 and 240 ka. The first stages of roche moutonnee formation are recognised in the exhumation of tor stumps but development of lee-side steps remains very limited. Granite domes retain a pre-glacial morphology and local examples of hill asymmetry are determined by structural, rather than glaciological controls. Development of roches moutonnees and asymmetric and streamlined hills by glacial erosion has not occurred in the Sudetes despite the passage of largely warm-based ice sheets 80-500 m thick that persisted for 5-20 ka. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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