Drumlins Of The Puget Lowland, Washington State, Usa

The last advance of the Puget Lobe, a piedmont glacier that extended southward down the axis of the fjord-like Puget Lowland from the main mass of the Cordilleran Ice Sheet, produced an extensive drumlin field approximately 170 km in length and nearly 100 km wide. The timing of both the advance and...

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Published in:Sedimentary Geology
Main Author: Goldstein, Barry S.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Sound Ideas 1994
Subjects:
24
Online Access:https://soundideas.pugetsound.edu/faculty_pubs/2531
https://doi.org/10.1016/0037-0738(94)90136-8
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spelling ftunivpugetsound:oai:soundideas.pugetsound.edu:faculty_pubs-3538 2023-05-15T16:41:32+02:00 Drumlins Of The Puget Lowland, Washington State, Usa Goldstein, Barry S. 1994-06-01T07:00:00Z https://soundideas.pugetsound.edu/faculty_pubs/2531 https://doi.org/10.1016/0037-0738(94)90136-8 unknown Sound Ideas https://soundideas.pugetsound.edu/faculty_pubs/2531 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0037-0738(94)90136-8 All Faculty Scholarship quaternary geology 24 clastic sediments drumlins erosion glacial erosion glacial features glacial geology gravel meltwater piedmonts puget lobe puget lowland sand sediments subglacial environment till troughs united states washington text 1994 ftunivpugetsound https://doi.org/10.1016/0037-0738(94)90136-8 2022-07-27T18:32:16Z The last advance of the Puget Lobe, a piedmont glacier that extended southward down the axis of the fjord-like Puget Lowland from the main mass of the Cordilleran Ice Sheet, produced an extensive drumlin field approximately 170 km in length and nearly 100 km wide. The timing of both the advance and retreat of the lobe across the region is well constrained, and took no more than a total of 1500 years. In the southern portion of the field, drumlin axis orientations are more closely perpendicular to recessional ice margin positions than to the reconstructed ice-maximum surface contours. This suggests that the drumlin field was formed in a time-transgressive manner as the ice front retreated from south to north, and that each of the numerous recessional phases was characterised by a narrow drumlin-forming zone that extended no more than a few kilometres back from the margin. This would also indicate that only a few decades were required for the formation of individual drumlins in the Puget Lowland. The drumlin forms are composed of compact till that overlies and truncates a 100 m thick sand and gravel unit. The sand has been interpreted as proglacial outwash, originally formed as a continuous blanket deposited in front (south) of the advancing Puget Lobe. It forms the main component within the lower 10-50% of the drumlin till, while farther-travelled components appear in progressively greater proportion with increasing height above the contact. The drumlins are thus interpreted as being of constructional origin. Evidence of minor subglacial meltwater activity occurs in the form of scattered, discontinuous water-sorted lenses interbedded throughout the till. The entire drumlin field is subdivided into a series of sub-parallel regions separated by deep troughs that extend to depths as great as 850 m below the drumlin-capped upland surface. Regional relationships indicate that the drumlins and the troughs formed contemporaneously, but that both post-date the deposition of the outwash. Thus, drumlin formation (net ... Text Ice Sheet University of Puget Sound: Sound Ideas Sedimentary Geology 91 1-4 299 311
institution Open Polar
collection University of Puget Sound: Sound Ideas
op_collection_id ftunivpugetsound
language unknown
topic quaternary geology
24
clastic sediments
drumlins
erosion
glacial erosion
glacial features
glacial geology
gravel
meltwater
piedmonts
puget lobe
puget lowland
sand
sediments
subglacial environment
till
troughs
united states
washington
spellingShingle quaternary geology
24
clastic sediments
drumlins
erosion
glacial erosion
glacial features
glacial geology
gravel
meltwater
piedmonts
puget lobe
puget lowland
sand
sediments
subglacial environment
till
troughs
united states
washington
Goldstein, Barry S.
Drumlins Of The Puget Lowland, Washington State, Usa
topic_facet quaternary geology
24
clastic sediments
drumlins
erosion
glacial erosion
glacial features
glacial geology
gravel
meltwater
piedmonts
puget lobe
puget lowland
sand
sediments
subglacial environment
till
troughs
united states
washington
description The last advance of the Puget Lobe, a piedmont glacier that extended southward down the axis of the fjord-like Puget Lowland from the main mass of the Cordilleran Ice Sheet, produced an extensive drumlin field approximately 170 km in length and nearly 100 km wide. The timing of both the advance and retreat of the lobe across the region is well constrained, and took no more than a total of 1500 years. In the southern portion of the field, drumlin axis orientations are more closely perpendicular to recessional ice margin positions than to the reconstructed ice-maximum surface contours. This suggests that the drumlin field was formed in a time-transgressive manner as the ice front retreated from south to north, and that each of the numerous recessional phases was characterised by a narrow drumlin-forming zone that extended no more than a few kilometres back from the margin. This would also indicate that only a few decades were required for the formation of individual drumlins in the Puget Lowland. The drumlin forms are composed of compact till that overlies and truncates a 100 m thick sand and gravel unit. The sand has been interpreted as proglacial outwash, originally formed as a continuous blanket deposited in front (south) of the advancing Puget Lobe. It forms the main component within the lower 10-50% of the drumlin till, while farther-travelled components appear in progressively greater proportion with increasing height above the contact. The drumlins are thus interpreted as being of constructional origin. Evidence of minor subglacial meltwater activity occurs in the form of scattered, discontinuous water-sorted lenses interbedded throughout the till. The entire drumlin field is subdivided into a series of sub-parallel regions separated by deep troughs that extend to depths as great as 850 m below the drumlin-capped upland surface. Regional relationships indicate that the drumlins and the troughs formed contemporaneously, but that both post-date the deposition of the outwash. Thus, drumlin formation (net ...
format Text
author Goldstein, Barry S.
author_facet Goldstein, Barry S.
author_sort Goldstein, Barry S.
title Drumlins Of The Puget Lowland, Washington State, Usa
title_short Drumlins Of The Puget Lowland, Washington State, Usa
title_full Drumlins Of The Puget Lowland, Washington State, Usa
title_fullStr Drumlins Of The Puget Lowland, Washington State, Usa
title_full_unstemmed Drumlins Of The Puget Lowland, Washington State, Usa
title_sort drumlins of the puget lowland, washington state, usa
publisher Sound Ideas
publishDate 1994
url https://soundideas.pugetsound.edu/faculty_pubs/2531
https://doi.org/10.1016/0037-0738(94)90136-8
genre Ice Sheet
genre_facet Ice Sheet
op_source All Faculty Scholarship
op_relation https://soundideas.pugetsound.edu/faculty_pubs/2531
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0037-0738(94)90136-8
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1016/0037-0738(94)90136-8
container_title Sedimentary Geology
container_volume 91
container_issue 1-4
container_start_page 299
op_container_end_page 311
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