The Nant Ffrancon protalus rampart: evidence for Late Pleistocene paraglacial landsliding in North Wales

This paper assesses the validity of a protalus (pronival) rampart hypothesis and three alternative hypotheses (lateral moraine, protalus rock glacier and landslide) for the origin of a fossil talus-foot debris accumulation in North Wales. Whilst a rampart origin is supported by the landform's c...

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Main Authors: Curry, AM, Walden, John, Cheshire, DA
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://risweb.st-andrews.ac.uk/portal/en/researchoutput/the-nant-ffrancon-protalus-rampart-evidence-for-late-pleistocene-paraglacial-landsliding-in-north-wales(1fa66797-0739-4149-9260-9f019e7c80fa).html
id ftunstandrewcris:oai:risweb.st-andrews.ac.uk:publications/1fa66797-0739-4149-9260-9f019e7c80fa
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunstandrewcris:oai:risweb.st-andrews.ac.uk:publications/1fa66797-0739-4149-9260-9f019e7c80fa 2023-05-15T16:21:58+02:00 The Nant Ffrancon protalus rampart: evidence for Late Pleistocene paraglacial landsliding in North Wales Curry, AM Walden, John Cheshire, DA 2001 https://risweb.st-andrews.ac.uk/portal/en/researchoutput/the-nant-ffrancon-protalus-rampart-evidence-for-late-pleistocene-paraglacial-landsliding-in-north-wales(1fa66797-0739-4149-9260-9f019e7c80fa).html eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Curry , AM , Walden , J & Cheshire , DA 2001 , The Nant Ffrancon protalus rampart: evidence for Late Pleistocene paraglacial landsliding in North Wales . . LOCH LOMOND ADVANCE UPLAND BRITAIN BRECON-BEACONS ROCK GLACIERS RELICT TALUS SOUTH WALES SCOTLAND NORWAY SEDIMENTOLOGY FORMS other 2001 ftunstandrewcris 2021-12-26T14:11:24Z This paper assesses the validity of a protalus (pronival) rampart hypothesis and three alternative hypotheses (lateral moraine, protalus rock glacier and landslide) for the origin of a fossil talus-foot debris accumulation in North Wales. Whilst a rampart origin is supported by the landform's clear crestline, its morphological and topographic characteristics are unlike true protalus ramparts. In particular, its large volume implies Loch Lomond Stade (Younger Dryas) rockwall retreat roughly four times greater than that indicated by contemporaneous ramparts elsewhere in Britain. A glacial origin is dismissed on account of marked sedimentological and petrological contrasts between the landform debris and nearby till deposits. The absence of evidence for subsurface thrusting rules out a protalus rock glacier interpretation. The size and form of the landform and its constituent debris, the configuration of the rockwall, the presence of backward-tilted blocks and bedrock joints dipping out of the rockwall point to large-scale rocksliding as the most likely explanation for the landform, possibly associated with Late Devensian (Dimlington Stade) deglaciation. Three significant implications of these findings relate to (1) the identification of fossil, polygenetic talus-foot features, (2) Late Devensian climate and (3) paraglacial slope instability. Other/Unknown Material glacier University of St Andrews: Research Portal Loch Lomond ENVELOPE(-125.746,-125.746,54.239,54.239) Norway
institution Open Polar
collection University of St Andrews: Research Portal
op_collection_id ftunstandrewcris
language English
topic LOCH LOMOND ADVANCE
UPLAND BRITAIN
BRECON-BEACONS
ROCK GLACIERS
RELICT TALUS
SOUTH WALES
SCOTLAND
NORWAY
SEDIMENTOLOGY
FORMS
spellingShingle LOCH LOMOND ADVANCE
UPLAND BRITAIN
BRECON-BEACONS
ROCK GLACIERS
RELICT TALUS
SOUTH WALES
SCOTLAND
NORWAY
SEDIMENTOLOGY
FORMS
Curry, AM
Walden, John
Cheshire, DA
The Nant Ffrancon protalus rampart: evidence for Late Pleistocene paraglacial landsliding in North Wales
topic_facet LOCH LOMOND ADVANCE
UPLAND BRITAIN
BRECON-BEACONS
ROCK GLACIERS
RELICT TALUS
SOUTH WALES
SCOTLAND
NORWAY
SEDIMENTOLOGY
FORMS
description This paper assesses the validity of a protalus (pronival) rampart hypothesis and three alternative hypotheses (lateral moraine, protalus rock glacier and landslide) for the origin of a fossil talus-foot debris accumulation in North Wales. Whilst a rampart origin is supported by the landform's clear crestline, its morphological and topographic characteristics are unlike true protalus ramparts. In particular, its large volume implies Loch Lomond Stade (Younger Dryas) rockwall retreat roughly four times greater than that indicated by contemporaneous ramparts elsewhere in Britain. A glacial origin is dismissed on account of marked sedimentological and petrological contrasts between the landform debris and nearby till deposits. The absence of evidence for subsurface thrusting rules out a protalus rock glacier interpretation. The size and form of the landform and its constituent debris, the configuration of the rockwall, the presence of backward-tilted blocks and bedrock joints dipping out of the rockwall point to large-scale rocksliding as the most likely explanation for the landform, possibly associated with Late Devensian (Dimlington Stade) deglaciation. Three significant implications of these findings relate to (1) the identification of fossil, polygenetic talus-foot features, (2) Late Devensian climate and (3) paraglacial slope instability.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Curry, AM
Walden, John
Cheshire, DA
author_facet Curry, AM
Walden, John
Cheshire, DA
author_sort Curry, AM
title The Nant Ffrancon protalus rampart: evidence for Late Pleistocene paraglacial landsliding in North Wales
title_short The Nant Ffrancon protalus rampart: evidence for Late Pleistocene paraglacial landsliding in North Wales
title_full The Nant Ffrancon protalus rampart: evidence for Late Pleistocene paraglacial landsliding in North Wales
title_fullStr The Nant Ffrancon protalus rampart: evidence for Late Pleistocene paraglacial landsliding in North Wales
title_full_unstemmed The Nant Ffrancon protalus rampart: evidence for Late Pleistocene paraglacial landsliding in North Wales
title_sort nant ffrancon protalus rampart: evidence for late pleistocene paraglacial landsliding in north wales
publishDate 2001
url https://risweb.st-andrews.ac.uk/portal/en/researchoutput/the-nant-ffrancon-protalus-rampart-evidence-for-late-pleistocene-paraglacial-landsliding-in-north-wales(1fa66797-0739-4149-9260-9f019e7c80fa).html
long_lat ENVELOPE(-125.746,-125.746,54.239,54.239)
geographic Loch Lomond
Norway
geographic_facet Loch Lomond
Norway
genre glacier
genre_facet glacier
op_source Curry , AM , Walden , J & Cheshire , DA 2001 , The Nant Ffrancon protalus rampart: evidence for Late Pleistocene paraglacial landsliding in North Wales . .
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
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