LOVELL, Harold, LIVINGSTONE, Stephen, BOSTON, Clare, BOOTH, Adam, STORRAR, Robert and BARR, Lestyn (2019). Complex kame belt morphology, stratigraphy and architecture. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms, 44 (13), 2685-2702. [Article]
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Lovell et al. (2019) ESPL (accepted manuscript).pdf - Accepted Version
Available under License All rights reserved.
Lovell et al. (2019) ESPL (accepted manuscript).pdf - Accepted Version
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Abstract
The development of glacier karst at the margins of melting ice sheets produces
complex glaciofluvial sediment-landform assemblages that provide information on ice
sheet downwasting processes. We present the first combined geomorphological,
sedimentological and geophysical investigation of the Brampton Kame Belt, an
important glaciofluvial depositional zone at the centre of the last British-Irish Ice Sheet.
Ground-penetrating radar (GPR) data allow the broad scale internal architecture of
ridges (eskers) and flat-topped hills (ice-walled lake plains) to be determined at four
sites. In combination with sediment exposures, these provide information on lateral
and vertical variations in accretion styles, depositional boundaries, and grain size
changes. Building on existing work on the subject, we propose a refined model for the
formation of ice-walled lake plains resulting from the evolution and collapse of major
drainage axes into lakes as stable glacier karst develops during deglaciation. The
internal structure of esker ridges demonstrates variations in sedimentation that can be
linked to differences in ridge morphologies across the kame belt. This includes low
energy flow conditions and multiple accretion phases identified within large S-N
oriented esker ridges; and fluctuating water pressures, hyperconcentrated flows, and
significant deformation within a fragmented SW-NE oriented esker ridge. In
combination with updated geomorphological mapping, this work allows us to identify
two main styles of drainage within the kame belt: (1) major drainage axes aligned
broadly S-N that extend through the entire kame belt and collapsed into a chain of icewalled lakes; and (2) a series of smaller, fragmented SW-NE aligned esker ridges that
represent ice-marginal drainage as the ice sheet receded south-eastwards up the Vale
of Eden. Our study demonstrates the importance of integrated geomorphological,
sedimentological and geophysical investigations in order to understand complex and
polyphase glaciofluvial sediment-landform assemblages.
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