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Very large convergent multi-fluted glacigenic deposits in the NW Highlands, Scotland

Davies, T.R.H.; Warburton, J.; Turnbull, J.M.

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Authors

T.R.H. Davies

J.M. Turnbull



Abstract

We describe two large convergent multi-fluted glacigenic deposits in the NW Highlands, Scotland, and point out their resemblance to a number of landforms emerging from presently deglaciating areas of Greenland and Antarctica. We suggest that they all result from locally sourced sediment being deposited by local ice-flow, which was laterally confined by the margins of much larger adjacent glaciers or ice-streams. The NW Highlands features thus seem likely to be the result of processes active during the latter part of the Devensian Glaciation. One of these deposits, on the peninsula between Loch Broom and Little Loch Broom, is evidently sourced from the west-facing Coire Dearg of Beinn Ghobhlach, but was emplaced in a WNW direction rather than along the WSW fall-line. This suggests that the ice that emplaced it was confined by the margins of large glaciers then occupying the adjacent valleys of Loch Broom and Little Loch Broom. The second much larger and more prominent deposit, in Applecross, is composed of bouldery Torridonian sandstone till emplaced on to glacially scoured bedrock; the only feasible source location for this material is about 12 km distant, which requires that the deposit was carried by ice across the trough of Strath Maol Chalum and emplaced while active ice-streams confined it laterally to its present-day location. This, in turn, requires that ice lay in the Inner Sound between Applecross and Skye to an elevation 400–500 m above present-day sea-level. The Wester Ross Re-advance of 15–14 ka left a fragment of lateral moraine against the most easterly flute and buried the distal end of the flutes with hummocky moraine. We hypothesize that the fluted deposits reflect the locations of the ice-stream margins that constrained deposition of locally derived ice-transported sediment, rather than the flow-lines of the ice-stream itself.

Citation

Davies, T., Warburton, J., & Turnbull, J. (2019). Very large convergent multi-fluted glacigenic deposits in the NW Highlands, Scotland. Scottish Journal of Geology, 55(2), 155-165. https://doi.org/10.1144/sjg2018-003

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date May 16, 2019
Online Publication Date Jul 17, 2019
Publication Date Nov 30, 2019
Deposit Date Jul 8, 2019
Publicly Available Date Jul 17, 2020
Journal Scottish Journal of Geology
Print ISSN 0036-9276
Electronic ISSN 2041-4951
Publisher The Geological Society
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 55
Issue 2
Pages 155-165
DOI https://doi.org/10.1144/sjg2018-003
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1297743

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Accepted Journal Article (3.2 Mb)
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Copyright Statement
Davies, T.R.H., Warburton, J. & Turnbull, J.M. (2019). Very large convergent multi-fluted glacigenic deposits in the NW Highlands, Scotland. Scottish Journal of Geology 55(2): 155-165, https://doi.org/10.1144/sjg2018-003 © Geological Society of London 2019.






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