4 Marginal Meltwater Channels
4 Marginal Meltwater Channels
4 Marginal Meltwater Channels
Meltwater channels are commonly defined as channels cut by glacial meltwater under
(sublacial), along (lateral or marginal) and in front of (proglacial) an ice margin. They can vary
greatly in size, from short and shallow furrows to the so-called Tunnel valleys reaching as much
as 100 km in lengths, several kilometers in width and several hundred meters in depth. The
individual channel morphology is also highly variable. They may be deep and narrow canyons
cut in bedrock, V-shaped channels cut in sediment, as is common in steep terrain due to slope
processes, or shallow and flat-floored with steep sides in gentle sediment terrain.
Formation processes
Sub-glacial meltwater creates channels in the basal ice or in the glacier bed. The latter are
called Nye channels and are typically up to a few kilometers long and a few tens of meters
wide. The channels are aligned more or less parallel to the former glacier flow and reflect the
sub-glacial drainage system. They can be single features or they can be part of a dendritic or
anastomosing channel system. Nye channels can run uphill since it is the hydrostatic pressure
gradient that drives sub-glacial meltwater drainage. Tunnel valleys, mentioned above, belong
to this category but the large dimensions call for a special and more complex origin than
normal Nye channels. In channels formed in bedrock, i.e. canyons, heavy sediment load and
cavitation may have contributed to fast erosion. This is particularly true for channels created
during catastrophic draining of ice-dammed lakes.
Paleoglaciological significance
Proglacial meltwater forms a part of the general fluvial drainage system, and today’s drainage
often uses former glacial meltwater routes. It may therefore be difficult to determine whether a
channel in a former glaciated landscape is glacial or fluvial.
Glacial meltwater channels that are part of a consistent deglaciation drainage system can be
used in reconstructing ice flow direction and ice retreat. Channels that are cut by meltwater
channels or overridden by flutes should not be used. Nye channels, and eskers, show the
general direction of ice flow. Lateral channels and breach channels indicate the inclination of
the ice surface. Using lateral channels we can follow the successive retreat of the ice margin.
Nye channels, eskers, short lateral channels, and sub-lateral chutes indicate temperate ice.
Long persistent channel systems indicate cold surface ice. A high frequency of chutes may
indicate that the ice was stagnant while downwasting.
Google Earth examples (right click and select 'save link as' to download)
References
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