Jökull

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Jökull - 01.12.1990, Qupperneq 54

Jökull - 01.12.1990, Qupperneq 54
LANDFORMS REFLECTING THE DIRECTION OF GLACIAL MOVEMENT Glacial striae Two sets of striae directions are often found on the same rock and three different directions at the same lo- cality are not uncommon. Usually the youngest striae are parallel to the streamline forms of the glacially sculptured bedrock, while an older direction is found on the lee sides. Not as common is the situation where the older direction is dominant and the youngest striae only form vague scratches on the stoss sides. In such cases the glacier action has not lasted long enough to reshape the rock according to the new direction of ice flow. Correlation between localities is difficult, and one must bear in mind, that observations indicating the same direction of movement, are not necessarily of the same age. The oldest striae direction commonly found is likely to indicate the movement pattem of the glaciers at their Weichselian maximum extent. Fluted moraine In some areas the surface has lineations approx- imately parallel to the former ice movement. These are called fluted moraine. The flutes are subglacially formed and always show the last direction of the ice movement. Of more than 1300 mapped flutes 80% are between 300 and 800 m long. In Central Iceland flutes are often very distinct because of lack of vegetation. Drumlins are not shown on the maps, because quick consolidation of the glass- rich till makes it pos- sible for drumlins to last for more than one glaciation. Consequently their directional pattern can be com- plex. Furthermore they can easily be confused with volcanic ridges where the ice flow direction is similar to the direction of volcanic fissures. End moraines Many end moraines have been found in the re- search area. Most of them are low and narrow ridges of boulders and stones and there is no indication of a major halt in the retreat. Sandur plains formed in front of the end moraines are usually small. The meltwater runoff in the retreat period was no less than at present so the reason for the small sandar must be a very short standstill of the ice front. Huge deposits of this kind do occur but only where the general ground surface slopes towards the retreating ice front. As most of the broad and flat inland outlets of Vatnajökull are known to be affected by periodic surges (Thorarinsson, 1964), one can expect the inland glaciers of the retreating Weichselian ice to have acted in a similar way. Brúarjökull, a flat and lobe-shaped outlet on the northern side of Vatnajökull, surged 1890 and 1964 (Thorarinsson, 1969). End moraines and other features resulting from these surges are very much alike moraines described in this paper. It is therefore our opinion that the end moraines we are dealing with show the maximum extent of in- dividual surges of the glacier. For expanding glaciers one can expect such moraines to form close together or to form belts of parallel moraines. Where a series of end moraines with considerable distance between them have been formed, as in the research area, it in- dicates that the climate was warming up and that each surge did not reach as far as the previous one. In other words the surges were superimposed on a general re- treating trend. It can be risky to correlate end moraines from two different ice lobes without any stratigraphical evidence (Punkari, 1980). Data on surges of various ice lobes of the present glaciers in Iceland (Thorarinsson, 1964; 1969) show that concurrent surges of two adjacent ice lobes would be a mere coincidence. Eskers Eskers are long curveous ridges of glaciofluvial material formed where glacial meltwater looses its transport capacity near a glacier snout. They are formed in a subglacial or submarginal environment. The direction of eskers is likely to reflect the sub- glacial runoff pattem which depends primarily on the direction of the slope of the upper surface of the ice (Björnsson, 1988), which in turn determines the direc- tion of ice movement. Thus, eskers are ice-directed features and indirect indicators of the last direction of regional ice movement. 52 JÖKULL, No. 40, 1990
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