Surficial Geology and Geomorphology of the Western Olympus Range, Antarctica: Implications for Ice-sheet History

A widespread erosion surface passes across bedrock and sedimentary deposits in the western Dry Valleys sector of the Transantarctic Mountains (TAM), southern Victoria Land, Antarctica. The surface includes stoss-and-lee slopes, channels, potholes, scoured basins, and corrugated bedrock. These featur...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: VandenHeuvel, Brett
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: DigitalCommons@UMaine 2002
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Online Access:https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/etd/657
https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/context/etd/article/1546/viewcontent/VandenHeuvelB2002.pdf
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Summary:A widespread erosion surface passes across bedrock and sedimentary deposits in the western Dry Valleys sector of the Transantarctic Mountains (TAM), southern Victoria Land, Antarctica. The surface includes stoss-and-lee slopes, channels, potholes, scoured basins, and corrugated bedrock. These features have been taken to represent subglacial meltwater erosion beneath a greatly expanded East Antarctic Ice Sheet (EAIS) in the mid-Miocene (Denton et al. 1984, Marchant et al. 1993a). Sedimentary deposits that are typically associated with ice-sheet wastage, such as outwash, are not present on the erosion surface. The lack of these deposits indicates that the expanded ice-sheet postulated to be responsible for the erosion surface probably sublimated from the mountains under a polar desert climate. By this hypothesis, the nearly perfect preservation of geomorphic features on the erosion surface suggests that the Dry Valleys region has been locked in polar desert conditions since the erosion surface was carved in mid-Miocene time. The adjacent ENS probably remained stable under such climate conditions. An alternate hypothesis suggests that the erosional features are the product of wind-deflation and chemical weathering of the land surface (Selby 1985, Isaac et al. 1996, Healy 1976). The wind-deflation hypothesis implies that the surface may be forming under present-day polar desert processes and has nothing to do with ice-sheet history. Chronology is one means of discriminating between these hypotheses. When was the erosion surface carved? Is it ancient (consistent with the subglacial erosion hypothesis), or is it still forming (consistent with the wind-deflation hypothesis)? From a study of the glacial geology and geomorphology of the western Olympus Range in the Dry Valleys region, I present here the stratigraphic context and chronology of the erosion surface and three sedimentary units, Circe till, Electra colluvium, and Alpine till. Circe till is a fine-grained diamicton with striated clasts that was deposited ...