Scottish landform examples 45 : Sgriob na Caillich: a landslide-sourced medial moraine on the Isle of Jura

Medial moraines deposited by former glaciers and ice sheets are rare in Scotland. The most prominent example is the Sgriob na Caillich moraine, which consists of two to four parallel belts of angular quartzite boulders that extend northwestwards for over 3.5 km from the SW flank of Beinn an Oir on t...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Scottish Geographical Journal
Main Authors: Ballantyne, Colin K., Dawson, Alastair G.
Other Authors: University of St Andrews. School of Geography & Sustainable Development
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
G1
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10023/20642
https://doi.org/10.1080/14702541.2019.1669812
Description
Summary:Medial moraines deposited by former glaciers and ice sheets are rare in Scotland. The most prominent example is the Sgriob na Caillich moraine, which consists of two to four parallel belts of angular quartzite boulders that extend northwestwards for over 3.5 km from the SW flank of Beinn an Oir on the Isle of Jura. The boulder belts extend to within 300 m of the present coastline, where they are truncated by a low bluff and raised marine terrace. The source of the moraine coincides with bedrock gullies and cliffs that represent the scars of former rock-slope failure(s), indicating that the moraine debris was sourced by one or more rockfalls or rockslides onto the ice surface after Beinn an Oir had emerged from the thinning ice cover as a nunatak. Exposure dating of boulders on the moraine indicate that it formed at 16.6 ± 0.8 ka, consistent with the timing of ice-sheet retreat in this sector. The alignment of the moraine indicates ice-margin retreat to the SE; as regional ice-sheet retreat across the adjacent offshore shelf was to the NE, this anomaly implies that a residual icefield became stranded on Jura during ice-sheet retreat. Postprint Peer reviewed