Near-surface brecciation of chalk, isle of thanet, south-east England: a comparison with ice-rich brecciated bedrocks in Canada and Spitsbergen

Chalk on the Isle of Thanet, Kent, is brecciated to depths of a few metres beneath the ground surface. The brecciation commonly comprises (i) an undeformed layer of angular, platy blocks more or less parallel to the surface overlain by (ii) a deformed layer containing small open folds, typically wit...

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Main Author: Julian Murton
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 1996
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Near-surface_brecciation_of_chalk_isle_of_thanet_south-east_England_a_comparison_with_ice-rich_brecciated_bedrocks_in_Canada_and_Spitsbergen/23319398
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spelling ftunivsussexfig:oai:figshare.com:article/23319398 2023-06-18T03:39:33+02:00 Near-surface brecciation of chalk, isle of thanet, south-east England: a comparison with ice-rich brecciated bedrocks in Canada and Spitsbergen Julian Murton 1996-04-01T00:00:00Z https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Near-surface_brecciation_of_chalk_isle_of_thanet_south-east_England_a_comparison_with_ice-rich_brecciated_bedrocks_in_Canada_and_Spitsbergen/23319398 unknown 10779/uos.23319398.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Near-surface_brecciation_of_chalk_isle_of_thanet_south-east_England_a_comparison_with_ice-rich_brecciated_bedrocks_in_Canada_and_Spitsbergen/23319398 Copyright not evaluated Uncategorised value Text Journal contribution 1996 ftunivsussexfig 2023-06-07T23:32:01Z Chalk on the Isle of Thanet, Kent, is brecciated to depths of a few metres beneath the ground surface. The brecciation commonly comprises (i) an undeformed layer of angular, platy blocks more or less parallel to the surface overlain by (ii) a deformed layer containing small open folds, typically with vertical axial planes. Above the brecciated chalk is an involuted layer (~0.5 to 2.0 m thick) of chalk diamicton and brickearth. By analogy with brecciated ice-rich limestones, arkoses and shales in areas of continuous permafrost in Arctic Canada and Spitsbergen, it is suggested that brecciation of the Chalk resulted primarily from ice segregation in perennially frozen bedrock, and repeated segregation formed an ice-rich layer just beneath the former permafrost table. Subsequent thaw consolidation of this layer is thought to have formed an involuted layer through soft-sediment deformation. Three implications arise from this study: (i) near-surface brecciation of the Chalk probably took place during conditions of continuous permafrost; (ii) the growth and thaw of the ice-rich layer in chalk was probably an important element in the geomorphological evolution of the English Chalklands, heaving and brecciating the Chalk during permafrost conditions, and deforming or redepositing the overburden during periods of active-layer deepening; and (iii) repeated ice segregation near the top of permafrost may have brecciated other bedrocks in the British Isles. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Ice permafrost Spitsbergen University of Sussex: Figshare Arctic Canada
institution Open Polar
collection University of Sussex: Figshare
op_collection_id ftunivsussexfig
language unknown
topic Uncategorised value
spellingShingle Uncategorised value
Julian Murton
Near-surface brecciation of chalk, isle of thanet, south-east England: a comparison with ice-rich brecciated bedrocks in Canada and Spitsbergen
topic_facet Uncategorised value
description Chalk on the Isle of Thanet, Kent, is brecciated to depths of a few metres beneath the ground surface. The brecciation commonly comprises (i) an undeformed layer of angular, platy blocks more or less parallel to the surface overlain by (ii) a deformed layer containing small open folds, typically with vertical axial planes. Above the brecciated chalk is an involuted layer (~0.5 to 2.0 m thick) of chalk diamicton and brickearth. By analogy with brecciated ice-rich limestones, arkoses and shales in areas of continuous permafrost in Arctic Canada and Spitsbergen, it is suggested that brecciation of the Chalk resulted primarily from ice segregation in perennially frozen bedrock, and repeated segregation formed an ice-rich layer just beneath the former permafrost table. Subsequent thaw consolidation of this layer is thought to have formed an involuted layer through soft-sediment deformation. Three implications arise from this study: (i) near-surface brecciation of the Chalk probably took place during conditions of continuous permafrost; (ii) the growth and thaw of the ice-rich layer in chalk was probably an important element in the geomorphological evolution of the English Chalklands, heaving and brecciating the Chalk during permafrost conditions, and deforming or redepositing the overburden during periods of active-layer deepening; and (iii) repeated ice segregation near the top of permafrost may have brecciated other bedrocks in the British Isles.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Julian Murton
author_facet Julian Murton
author_sort Julian Murton
title Near-surface brecciation of chalk, isle of thanet, south-east England: a comparison with ice-rich brecciated bedrocks in Canada and Spitsbergen
title_short Near-surface brecciation of chalk, isle of thanet, south-east England: a comparison with ice-rich brecciated bedrocks in Canada and Spitsbergen
title_full Near-surface brecciation of chalk, isle of thanet, south-east England: a comparison with ice-rich brecciated bedrocks in Canada and Spitsbergen
title_fullStr Near-surface brecciation of chalk, isle of thanet, south-east England: a comparison with ice-rich brecciated bedrocks in Canada and Spitsbergen
title_full_unstemmed Near-surface brecciation of chalk, isle of thanet, south-east England: a comparison with ice-rich brecciated bedrocks in Canada and Spitsbergen
title_sort near-surface brecciation of chalk, isle of thanet, south-east england: a comparison with ice-rich brecciated bedrocks in canada and spitsbergen
publishDate 1996
url https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Near-surface_brecciation_of_chalk_isle_of_thanet_south-east_England_a_comparison_with_ice-rich_brecciated_bedrocks_in_Canada_and_Spitsbergen/23319398
geographic Arctic
Canada
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
genre Arctic
Ice
permafrost
Spitsbergen
genre_facet Arctic
Ice
permafrost
Spitsbergen
op_relation 10779/uos.23319398.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Near-surface_brecciation_of_chalk_isle_of_thanet_south-east_England_a_comparison_with_ice-rich_brecciated_bedrocks_in_Canada_and_Spitsbergen/23319398
op_rights Copyright not evaluated
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