THE ARCHITECTURE OF A MODERN PUSH-MORAINE AT SVALBARD AS INFERRED FROM GROUND-PENETRATING RADAR MEASUREMENTS

Citation
I. Lonne et T. Lauritsen, THE ARCHITECTURE OF A MODERN PUSH-MORAINE AT SVALBARD AS INFERRED FROM GROUND-PENETRATING RADAR MEASUREMENTS, Arctic and alpine research, 28(4), 1996, pp. 488-495
Citations number
37
Categorie Soggetti
Geografhy
Journal title
ISSN journal
00040851
Volume
28
Issue
4
Year of publication
1996
Pages
488 - 495
Database
ISI
SICI code
0004-0851(1996)28:4<488:TAOAMP>2.0.ZU;2-6
Abstract
A modern moraine complex in front of a small subpolar valley glacier i n Svalbard, the Scott Turnerbreen glacier, has been investigated by gr ound-penetrating radar (GPR) (pulseEKKO(TM)IV system). The proglacial area is characterized by low relief ridges, which are concentric about the present ice front, and locally dissected by meltwater channels. E xposures suggest that the moraine sediments consist of mud-rich, debri s-flow deposits with outsized clasts (reworked ''till''). A profile, o riented parallel with the direction of ice-flow, was measured with 50 and 200 MHz antennae, affording depth penetration of 400 ns TWT (ca. 3 0 m) and 170 ns TWT (ca. 13 m), respectively. The high resolution of t hese continuous subsurface radar-profiles (distance between each trace is 50 cm), clearly displays the architecture of the moraine. Three se ts of reflectors are observed and interpreted as (1) primary bedding, dipping towards the northeast (downvalley), (2) buried ice-blocks, and (3) numerous thrust faults. The faults, truncating both sediment and ice-blocks, postdate the burying of the ice, and are attributed to pro glacial shear by the Scott Turnerbreen glacier. Thus, the present-day morphology of this low-relief moraine is controlled primarily by zones of intense thrust faults and secondarily by the position of the ice b locks.