4.6 Article

Architecture of Late Ordovician glacial valleys in the Tassili N'Ajjer area (Algeria)

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SEDIMENTARY GEOLOGY
卷 289, 期 -, 页码 124-147

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ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.sedgeo.2013.02.012

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Algeria; Ordovician; Glacial sequence; Tunnel valley; Glacial pathway; Outwash fan

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The architecture of three Late Ordovician glacial valleys was studied in detail in the Tassili N'Ajjer (SE Algeria) outcrops. The valleys are oriented south-north, 2 to 5 km wide, and up to 250 m deep. The valley-fills revealed a very complex sedimentary architecture with significant lateral facies changes. Several glacial cycles induced the formation of Glacial Erosion Surfaces (GES) at the base and within the glacial valleys. The first type of GES shows a sharp and steep-angled contact without striations or associated syn-sedimentary deformation, suggesting that subglacial meltwater was the dominant erosive agent. A second type associated with the deformation of pre-glacial and syn-glacial sediment, suggests that ice was in contact with the valley floor. Four facies associations are proposed: FA1: subglacial tillite; FA2: Sub-to pro-glacial ice contact fans; FA3: Proglacial sub-aqueous gravity flows; and FA4: outwash fans. The stratigraphic architecture of three of the main valleys reveals a complex polyphase infill. At least two main cycles of ice-sheet advance and retreat can be interpreted from the sedimentary succession of each valley. Minor glacial cycles by ice oscillations also occur locally. GES morphology and the fades sequence suggest that the Iherir valleys were initiated by meltwater erosion in subglacial channels, whereas the Dider and Ouarsissen valleys were part of a large ice stream pathway. Above the valley-fill and the interfluves, a sand-rich unit of stacked lobes and channels is interpreted as submarine outwash fans deposited during final ice retreat. A glacial sequence found between two GES comprises fluvio-glacial or ice-contact fan deposits, fluvio-glacial eskers and tills. These sediments were deposited subglacially or at the glacier front during the ice maximum phase and/or the early ice retreat phase. During the ice retreat, interbedded subaqueous gravity flow deposits and diamictites filled the glacially cut topography as the sea invaded the valleys. Maximum ice retreat was associated with high water fluxes and sediment discharge, causing a sand-dominated outwash fan to prograde out over the valleys and interfluves. This outwash fan was supplied mainly by flood activity at the ice front, involving high-density sustained flows. The dominant fades consists of giant aggrading climbing dunes filling channels or constructing sandy lobes downstream. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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