A model of the glacial retreat of upper Rennick Glacier, Victoria Land, Antarctica.

Thc morphology of the Lichen Hills in the upper section of Rennick Glacier, Victoria Land, Antarctica, is summarised as follows: (a) a top surface on the volcanic rocks with scattered erratic blocks; (b) an exhumed Kukri Peneplain, sculptured with roches moutonnées with striae and crescentic gouges...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Annals of Glaciology
Main Authors: MENEGHEL M., BONDESAN A., OROMBELLI G., SALVATORE, MARIA CRISTINA
Other Authors: Meneghel, M., Bondesan, A., Salvatore, MARIA CRISTINA, Orombelli, G.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11568/168279
https://doi.org/10.3189/172756499781821463
Description
Summary:Thc morphology of the Lichen Hills in the upper section of Rennick Glacier, Victoria Land, Antarctica, is summarised as follows: (a) a top surface on the volcanic rocks with scattered erratic blocks; (b) an exhumed Kukri Peneplain, sculptured with roches moutonnées with striae and crescentic gouges on which lie moraines and patches of drin of mainly volcanic rocks; (c) a granitic bedrock eroded by glaciers into sharp peaks and cirques, on top of which there is a glacial drift attributable to ancient blue-ice areas higher than those obscrved at present and which may be correlated with the Terra Nova drift (Late Wisconsin); (d) various Holocene ice-cored moraines that are pushed to the lee side of the nunataks and are often bandecl in strips of clifferent lithology. The banels of the Holocene moraines are related to the rock complexes that became exposed from the ice during the lowering of the surface of the glacier. Analysis of the lithology and pattern of the supraglacial debris, as well as of the blue-ice areas, allows us to construct a depositional model for the moraines, and to relate the glacial drift to blue-ice areas existing since the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). The proposed model shows the different stages of recession of upper Rennick Glacier that are also valid for similar situations observed in northern Victoria Land. A surface lowering of upper Rennick Glacier of several hundred metres shows that significant changes have occurred at the Pacific edlge of the East Antarctic ice sheet since the LGM.