Origin of the 610 th Avenue Moraine of the Des Moines Lobe, Story County, Iowa

The late-glacial (<∼>15 kyr B.P.) advance of the soft-bedded Des Moines Lobe, the marginal portion of an ice stream of the Laurentide Ice Sheet, deposited regularly-spaced, transverse moraines. These so-called washboard moraines have relief of 1-5 m, an average spacing of <∼>105 m, and a...

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Main Author: Ankerstjerne, Suzanne Marie
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Iowa State University Digital Repository 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/etd/11893
https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2857&context=etd
id ftiowastateuniv:oai:lib.dr.iastate.edu:etd-2857
record_format openpolar
spelling ftiowastateuniv:oai:lib.dr.iastate.edu:etd-2857 2023-05-15T16:41:37+02:00 Origin of the 610 th Avenue Moraine of the Des Moines Lobe, Story County, Iowa Ankerstjerne, Suzanne Marie 2010-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/etd/11893 https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2857&context=etd en eng Iowa State University Digital Repository https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/etd/11893 https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2857&context=etd Graduate Theses and Dissertations anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility crevasse Des Moines Lobe moraine washboard Earth Sciences text 2010 ftiowastateuniv 2018-11-26T01:25:59Z The late-glacial (<∼>15 kyr B.P.) advance of the soft-bedded Des Moines Lobe, the marginal portion of an ice stream of the Laurentide Ice Sheet, deposited regularly-spaced, transverse moraines. These so-called washboard moraines have relief of 1-5 m, an average spacing of <∼>105 m, and are distributed over the footprint of the Des Moines Lobe. Determining the processes responsible for the formation of these moraines may help illuminate aspects of Des Moines Lobe dynamics and origins of submarine transverse ridges adjacent to modern ice sheets. Washboard moraines may have formed as a result of weak basal sediments extruding into transverse crevasses in basal ice as the lobe underwent flow-parallel extension. To test this hypothesis, a cross-section (70 m long and up to 4 m high) was exposed across a prominent washboard moraine crest that is transected by 610th Avenue, 16 km southeast of Ames. The section was described, and sediment samples were collected to study their density, grain-size distribution, and preconsolidation pressure. Anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS) of 3200 intact till samples was used to characterize till fabrics with orientations of principal susceptibilities. AMS fabrics were interpreted using ring-shear experiments that allow fabric orientation to be calibrated to the state of till strain. The exposed cross-section revealed till with irregular, isolated lenses of silt, sand, and gravel that generally dip steeply up-glacier. Preconsolidation pressures, measured from intact till and silt samples, and till densities indicate that these sediments were under the glacier, precluding the possibility that they were deposited supraglacially at the glacier margin. Moreover these sediments could not have been pushed into a moraine ridge at the glacier margin without resetting preconsolidation pressures to significantly lower values. AMS fabrics in the moraine are consistent with flow-parallel shear, with shear planes inclined mildly up-glacier, together with flow-parallel shortening accompanied by vertical and lateral extension. This strain field is consistent with shearing and extrusion of weak basal till and subglacial fluvial sediments into basal crevasses during slip of the lobe <—> a conclusion supported by previous less detailed studies of several nearby moraines. These results provide support for reconstructions of the Des Moines Lobe and imply that the distribution of these landforms was spatially rather than temporally controlled. Text Ice Sheet Digital Repository @ Iowa State University Moraine Ridge ENVELOPE(168.050,168.050,-72.300,-72.300)
institution Open Polar
collection Digital Repository @ Iowa State University
op_collection_id ftiowastateuniv
language English
topic anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility
crevasse
Des Moines Lobe
moraine
washboard
Earth Sciences
spellingShingle anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility
crevasse
Des Moines Lobe
moraine
washboard
Earth Sciences
Ankerstjerne, Suzanne Marie
Origin of the 610 th Avenue Moraine of the Des Moines Lobe, Story County, Iowa
topic_facet anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility
crevasse
Des Moines Lobe
moraine
washboard
Earth Sciences
description The late-glacial (<∼>15 kyr B.P.) advance of the soft-bedded Des Moines Lobe, the marginal portion of an ice stream of the Laurentide Ice Sheet, deposited regularly-spaced, transverse moraines. These so-called washboard moraines have relief of 1-5 m, an average spacing of <∼>105 m, and are distributed over the footprint of the Des Moines Lobe. Determining the processes responsible for the formation of these moraines may help illuminate aspects of Des Moines Lobe dynamics and origins of submarine transverse ridges adjacent to modern ice sheets. Washboard moraines may have formed as a result of weak basal sediments extruding into transverse crevasses in basal ice as the lobe underwent flow-parallel extension. To test this hypothesis, a cross-section (70 m long and up to 4 m high) was exposed across a prominent washboard moraine crest that is transected by 610th Avenue, 16 km southeast of Ames. The section was described, and sediment samples were collected to study their density, grain-size distribution, and preconsolidation pressure. Anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS) of 3200 intact till samples was used to characterize till fabrics with orientations of principal susceptibilities. AMS fabrics were interpreted using ring-shear experiments that allow fabric orientation to be calibrated to the state of till strain. The exposed cross-section revealed till with irregular, isolated lenses of silt, sand, and gravel that generally dip steeply up-glacier. Preconsolidation pressures, measured from intact till and silt samples, and till densities indicate that these sediments were under the glacier, precluding the possibility that they were deposited supraglacially at the glacier margin. Moreover these sediments could not have been pushed into a moraine ridge at the glacier margin without resetting preconsolidation pressures to significantly lower values. AMS fabrics in the moraine are consistent with flow-parallel shear, with shear planes inclined mildly up-glacier, together with flow-parallel shortening accompanied by vertical and lateral extension. This strain field is consistent with shearing and extrusion of weak basal till and subglacial fluvial sediments into basal crevasses during slip of the lobe <—> a conclusion supported by previous less detailed studies of several nearby moraines. These results provide support for reconstructions of the Des Moines Lobe and imply that the distribution of these landforms was spatially rather than temporally controlled.
format Text
author Ankerstjerne, Suzanne Marie
author_facet Ankerstjerne, Suzanne Marie
author_sort Ankerstjerne, Suzanne Marie
title Origin of the 610 th Avenue Moraine of the Des Moines Lobe, Story County, Iowa
title_short Origin of the 610 th Avenue Moraine of the Des Moines Lobe, Story County, Iowa
title_full Origin of the 610 th Avenue Moraine of the Des Moines Lobe, Story County, Iowa
title_fullStr Origin of the 610 th Avenue Moraine of the Des Moines Lobe, Story County, Iowa
title_full_unstemmed Origin of the 610 th Avenue Moraine of the Des Moines Lobe, Story County, Iowa
title_sort origin of the 610 th avenue moraine of the des moines lobe, story county, iowa
publisher Iowa State University Digital Repository
publishDate 2010
url https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/etd/11893
https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2857&context=etd
long_lat ENVELOPE(168.050,168.050,-72.300,-72.300)
geographic Moraine Ridge
geographic_facet Moraine Ridge
genre Ice Sheet
genre_facet Ice Sheet
op_source Graduate Theses and Dissertations
op_relation https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/etd/11893
https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2857&context=etd
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