CGRG Bibliography of Canadian Geomorphology
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Author : Catto, N.R.
Date : 1998
Title : Comparative study of striations and basal till clast fabrics, Malpeque-Bedeque region, Prince Edward Island, Canada.
Publication : Boreas
Issue : 27(4):
Page(s) : 251-274.
Abstract
Coastal erosion has resulted in exposure of a succession of basal tin deposits and striation localities along the Malpeque and Bedeque Bays, PEI, Canada, permitting repetitive determinations of clast fabrics and investigation of recently exhumed striations. Striations indicate initial eastward ice flow, followed by a second glacial event with flow towards the south and southwest from the Gulf of St. Lawrence. The degree of local inconsistency and the variations with striation assemblages indicate that the orientations of individual striations cannot be regarded as 'absolute' indicators of ice flow directions. Diamictons identified as basal tills using sedimentological criteria have clast fabrics typical of basal till deposition. Local deviations of fabric trend within individual outcrops are common. A comparative analysis of the data obtained from striation and clast fabric orientations indicates that the ice flow directions independently suggested by each are in general agreement. Differences are present between the orientations of striations and clast fabrics at individual sites. The orientations of the fabrics lie within 20 degrees of the modal striation orientations in only 28% of the cases, and the median deviation between the suggested ice flow directions was 29 degrees. In 40% of the cases, the azimuth deviation between the two methods exceeded 40 degrees, and the maximum deviation recorded was 84 degrees. At many sites, the deviations are so severe as to potentially result in the misinterpretation of the modal ice flow direction, based on the use of either striation orientation or clast fabric in isolation. Variations in glacial flow can readily produce striations and clast fabrics which record different phases of glacial activity associated with the same glacial event at an individual site.
Bibliography of Canadian Geomorphology