Introduction
Relict ice-shelf moraines are thought to exist in many formerly glaciated areas. Reference England, Bradley and MillerEngland and others (1978) describe how in northern Canada the lateral moraines of former sea-terminating outlet glaciers can be traced into 2 km-long, shell-bearing horizontal moraines. In eastern and northern Greenland there are several puzzling horizontal moraines. Examples include a 40 km ridge on the northern shore of Scoresby Sund (Funder, personal communication), a 4 km ridge on Wollaston Foreland (where erratic content indicates an onshore movement), a 2 km ridge on the coast of south-east Peary Land, and a series of horizontal features extending for 30 km near the southern entrance of Døve Bugt (Hjort, personal communication). The horizontal nature of these ridges points tentatively to the role of an ice shelf at least as one factor in their development.
Observations from presently forming ice-shelf moraines are sparse and give little guide to the morphology or main processes involved. Reference DebenhamDebenham (1920, Reference Debenham1965), Reference Gow, Weeks, Hendrickson and RowlandGow and others (1965), and Reference SwithinbankSwithinbank (1970) discussed the origin of rock debris on the ablating surface of the McMurdo Ice Shelf in Antarctica, and Reference Lyons and MiekleLyons and Miekle (1973) make brief mention of debris-laden ice .ridges where an ice shelf grounds against Ward Hunt Island in northern Canada. The purpose of this paper is to discuss the morphology and processes involved in the construction of a horizontal moraine along the margin of the ice shelf in George VI Sound (Fig. 1). It is hoped that the model which is evolved will help to explain some of the features of relict ice-shelf moraines in other parts of the world.
George VI Sound is a block-faulted trench over 20 km wide and 500 km long and separates the mainly plutonic, tectonic block of the Antarctic Peninsula from the sedimentary rocks of middle and southern Alexander Island (Reference Adie, Priestley, Adie and RobinAdie 1964, Reference BellBell 1975). The ice shelf in the sound is nourished mainly by ice flowing from the Antarctic Peninsula, which is c.200 km across in this vicinity with mountains rising to 3 000 m. It has been shown that the ice shelf flows 20 to 50 km across the sound to Alexander Island but that there is also a slight northward movement along most of the sound (Reference SwithinbankSwithinbank 1968, Pearson and Rose, in press).These main flow lines are picked out by surface lake patterns on Landsat imagery (Fig. 2). In the Ablation Point/ Two Step Cliffs area, the ice shelf varies in thickness from around 400 to 500 m near the Antarctic Peninsula to around 100 to 300 m along the coast of Alexander Island. Temperatures at a depth of 10 m vary from –8˚C in the Ablation Point area to –10˚C in the Two Step Cliffs area (Reference Martin and PeelMartin and Peel 1978). Where the ice shelf grounds against Alexander Island or meets local glaciers there is a complex zone of pressure ridges with an amplitude of from 10 to 15 m (Fig. 3). At two places near Ablation Point the grounded ice shelf blocks the mouths of valleys and impounds tidal lakes (Reference HeywoodHeywood 1977). The lake in Ablation Valley is 5 × 2 km in size and up to 70 m deep while that in Moutonnée Valley is 1.5 × 1 km in size and up to 50 m deep.
Moraine morphology
The moraine is approximately horizontal over a distance of 120 km along the eastern promontories of Alexander Island between latitudes 71˚ 15'S and 72˚00'S. It also extends partially across the mouth of the Moutonnée Valley embayment and penetrates some distance into Ablation Valley (Fig. 2). The moraine has two main morphological components (Fig. 4). Adjacent to the active ice margin one component consists of an unstable zone of ice-cored debris, which in places forms sharp-crested ridges 2 to 10 m high and elsewhere forms broad (c.200 m) areas of gently undulating topography where the ice is overlain by melt-out and flow tills (Fig.5). The ridges are characterized by active slumping where slope angles exceed 35˚ and in many places the ice core is within 100 to 300 mm of the surface. A single ridge is the most common landform but three or more ridges and the broader bands of melt-out debris with complex micro-morphology seem more typical of embayments and areas where the ice shelf is aground on a more gently sloping land surface. The second component occurs on the landward side of the first and is a subdued moraine ridge up to 5 m high with slopes generally less than 10˚. In most places the moraine occurs as a single ridge but some sections of the deposit have bench-like morphology, typically 30 to 40 m wide. At Ablation and Moutonnée lakes the subdued moraine extends farther into the embayments than the sharp-crested moraine, but in some places the subdued moraine is missing altogether, even although the sharp-crested one is present; this situation seems only to occur at promontories where the slopes of Alexander Island descend steeply to the ice shelf, as, for example, just south of Moutonnée Lake. Both moraine components are pocked by kettle holes: ice is usually visible on the sides of kettle holes in the sharp-crested moraine, but was not seen in association with the subdued moraine. The crests of both ridges are everywhere lower than the surface of the pressure ridges in the adjacent grounded ice shelf.
Moraine composition
The material comprising the moraines varies in nature from loose accumulations of coarse angular debris to compacted till composed of well-abraded and striated clasts in a clayey matrix. Boulders 1 to 3 m in size litter the surface and although many are angular, others bear the smooth abraded and striated surfaces commonly associated with a subglacial environment. Mechanical analysis of the fine fraction revealed a matrix typical of such basal debris (Fig. 6 ). Of particular interest are the lithologies present. Although the majority of clasts are sedimentary rocks, especially the shale and volcaniclastics typical of Alexander Island, igneous rocks of a type not found locally on the island are also present. White, grey, red, and pink granites, gneiss, and granodiorite are typical. Randomly located counts of boulders over 500 mm in size in areas measuring 20 × 20 m revealed that these exotic boulders commonly comprise 4 to 70% of the total. At one locality on the moraine blocking Moutonnée Valley such exotics were the only boulders present. The percentages mentioned above are also typical of smaller clast sizes. Granite and gneiss pebbles occur in the conglomerates of Alexander Island but are clearly distinguished by their greater degree of chemical weathering (confirmed by examination in thin section), the water-rounded cobble surface, conspicuous iron staining, and their smaller size. Counts were initially restricted to boulders greater than 500 mm in size in order to minimize the possibility of confusion with locally derived conglomerate.
Three lines of evidence suggest that the exotic rocks have been derived from the Antarctic Peninsula: (a) Granites and gneiss of the type found are known to occur as bedrock on the peninsula but not in middle and southern Alexander Island (British Antarctic Survey Map Series 500G). This is confirmed by the absence of granite and gneiss erratics in moraines of neighbouring Alexander Island glaciers and is in contrast with their occurrence in the ice-shelf moraines and their dominance in peninsula tills; (b) Although the geology beneath the glaciers of the peninsula is not known in sufficient detail to permit the close matching of exotics with known bedrock outcrops, one match was established. Samples of granodiorite and gneiss found in the ice-shelf moraine near Ablation Point are identical to samples of granodiorite and gneiss bedrock outcropping on Gurney Point on the southern flank of the Bertram Glacier, which lies further up a flow line (Fig. 2); (c) Tests of the magnetic characteristics of the fine matrix in the ice-cored till just north of the glacier at Two Step Cliffs show the till to be more closely related to granite and gneiss bedrock than to the local sedimentary rocks of.Alexander Island (F. Oldfield, personal communication).
Interesting though the exotics may be, it is important to stress that on the whole the ice-shelf moraines consist of local Alexander Island rocks. This is reflected not only in the stone lithology counts but also in magnetic measurements on the fine matrix near Ablation Point, which suggest that here the ice-shelf matrix is derived from shale. Mixing of local and exotic debris is also consistent with the mechanical analysis data shown in Figure 6. This shows most ice-shelf tills lie intermediately between the fine-grained, poorly sorted tills of Alexander Island and the coarser, better sorted (mainly due to the lack of fine material) tills of the Batterbee Mountains. The percentages of clay in the tills also support this conclusion. The mean percentage of clay-sized material in a sample of Alexander Island basal tills was found to be 9.75% (standard deviation σ % 3.7) and that in the Batterbee Mountain tills 0.79% (σ=0.2). The ice-shelf moraines have an intermediate mean value of 5.3% (σ = 2.9) and range from 11.46% to 0.48%. Significantly the lowest values in the ice-shelf moraine occur in those areas where the exotic material is most abundant. For example, the lowest value of all, 0.48% in the ice-cored moraine just north of Two Step Cliffs, coincides with the sample thought by magnetic measurements to be the most closely related to granite and gneiss bedrock. The next lowest value (3.6%) coincides with the site between Jupiter Glacier and Moutonnée Lake where stone counts revealed 70% of the large boulders were exotic.
There are interesting spatial variations in the proportion of local and exotic debris. At a broad scale the exotic content of the moraines is highest where the ice shelf grounds close to the coast, for example just north of Two Step Cliffs and in the Moutonnée Valley area. The proportion of local rocks increases when the ice shelf grounds well offshore, for example, off Ablation Valley, and also where it meets larger Alexander Island glaciers. North of the junctions of Saturn and Jupiter glaciers local rock debris dominates the ice-shelf moraines and the exotics appear only 1 or 2 km to the north. At a small scale there is extreme variability of the proportions of exotic and local rocks within the space of a few metres. It was common to find a 1 to 2 m wide linear zone of local rocks parallel to the moraine crest immediately adjacent to a similar narrow zone of exotic rocks.
Some material in the ice-shelf moraines is derived from below sea-level in the sound. This is illustrated by the presence of barnacle shells, Bathylasma corrolliforme (Hoeke), found in the landward subdued moraine at Two Step Cliffs. The present bathymetric range of this barnacle in open sea is 200 to over 1 000 m (Reference Newman and RossNewman and Ross 1971). Though unlikely to be growing beneath the ice shelf today (Reference Sugden and ClappertonSugden and Clapperton 1980), the shells have presumably been derived from beneath sea-level after the growth of the ice shelf. No other evidence of marine derived material was found, however, despite close scrutiny for foraminifera and analysis of CaC03 content (inconclusive results averaging 0.63%).
Main processes occurring along the ice-shelf margin
Glaciological processes
The onshore flow of ice is complemented by upward and slight lateral components of movement. Upward movement implied by the presence of a surface till cover on the ice shelf associated with surface melting. But perhaps the clearest evidence for upward ice movement was seen in the case of uplifted stream sediments. One km south of Moutonnee Valley is a stream which flows mainly on land but formerly flowed onto the ice shelf in a meander. A meander was subsequently abandoned and sediments associated with it have since been elevated 8 m in relation to the river bed on the land. The northward component of movement is implied not only in the pattern of the pressure ridges and the flow lines of the ice shelf, but was demonstrated at a point immediately north of Moutonnée Valley. Here a bedrock outcrop of a distinctive lava protrudes into the zone of active moraine. Large blocks of lava derived from the outcrop occur in the ridge to the north but not to the south.
Ice movement at the ice margin includes both regular deformation and thrusting.
Regular deformation is implied by the regularity of foliation parallel to the ice margin which dips into the ice shelf at angles of 30 to 70˚. The wall of a fresh melt-water channel cut at right angles to the ice margin 3 km south of Moutonnee Valley showed layers of white bubbly ice varying in thickness from 100 to 600 mm alternating with bands of blue ice varying from 20 to 300 mm in thickness. They were sub-parallel and dipped at an angle of around 60˚. Differential ablation of the surface of the ice shelf revealed these foliation structures along most of the ice margin. Thrusting was observed in an abandoned melt-water tunnel 2 km south of Moutonnee Valley. The tunnel ran into the ice shelf at right angles to the margin for a distance of at least 50 m. Its diameter decreased from 20 m at the tunnel entrance to 5 m in the interior. The presence of the previous winter's snow cover in the tunnel entrance showed that it had not been used by melt Water for at least 8 months. Some 20 to 30 m from the entrance the floor and sides of the tunnel had been dislocated in relation to the entrance by three abrupt 2 m-high steps. There was also a slight lateral displacement of 1 m towards the north. The freshness of these steps demonstrated that they formed at some time after the tunnel was abandoned by melt water. No debris was found in association with these faults, but ice-cored moraine occurred in the vicinity of the tunnel entrance.
Evidence that marginal ice contains rock debris was seen in many sections along the ice-shelf margin. One such example just south of Ablation Valley is shown in Figure 7. The exposure measures 1.5 x 1.0 m and is the plan view of an approximately horizontal ice surface overlain by ice-cored debris. The 50 to 750 mm cover of melt-out debris was removed from the ice before measurement and sampling (Fig.5 ). The main feature was the presence of a band of transparent ice containing debris sandwiched between debris-free, white, foliated ice. All bands dipped towards the ice shelf at angles of 66 to 85˚. The transparent ice contained debris bands with clasts orientated parallel to the debris bands. Analysis showed the matrix to comprise a mean clay-sized fraction of 5.7% (σ = 1.9) and silt-sized fraction of 15.4% (σ = 0.06). These values are closely comparable to the ice-shelf moraines, although the latter are finer overall (Fig.6). Clasts in the debris bands consisted of local shales (48%) and volcaniclastics (52%).though exotic granites and gneisses occurred in the surface melt-out debris. 20% of the clasts were abraded. All clasts seen in the ice were incorporated within the thicker debris bands or, in the case of the thinner bands. were immediately adjacent to them. Two samples of 30 to 60 mm-thick debris bands were found to comprise 45% and 58% rock debris when measured by weight. Most debris bands were thinner than this and, for example, eight debris bands occurred within a distance of 90 mm. The transparent ice between the debris bands consisted of ice crystals 5 to 30 mm in diameter with a mean of 15 mm. The crystals contained some air bubbles and also traces of rock flour, amounting to 0.05% of the total by weight. No very large boulders were seen in the patch of ice examined, but one measuring 850x530x470 mm was lying on the ice surface immediately adjacent to the exposure (Fig.5).
The results of oxygen isotope measurements on the ice from various bands is shown in Figure 7. The white bubbly ice had a value δ180 = -18.12°/∞ while the transparent ice and debris bands had δ180 values between -14.93°/∞ and -9.98/∞. The more debris there was in the ice, the less negative was the value. For perspective, three δ180 measurements of ice in a small local glacier snout near Ablation Point yielded values of between -14.11°/∞ and -15.41°/∞. Typically, pure sea-water would have values close to zero or slightly positive (Reference Stuiver, Yang and DentonStuiver and others 1976).
There seem to be three main mechanisms by which rock debris can be incorporated into the ice shelf: (1) transport into the ice shelf by inflowing glaciers; (2) incorporation at the point of grounding by bottom freezing; and (3) incorporation at the point of grounding by ice sliding.
The first mechanism would explain the debris in the ice shelf as being derived from rock debris contained in both Antarctic Peninsula and Alexander Island glaciers which enter the ice shelf. The clearest evidence is concerned with the northern lateral moraines of Saturn and Jupiter glaciers which merge into the ice-shelf moraine. For 1 or 2 km north of the confluence, the ice-shelf moraine consists wholly of this local debris before becoming progressively mixed with other material. The presence of the exotic granites and gneisses suggests that this same mechanism also operates with regard to Antarctic Peninsula glaciers. The presence of striations on some exotic clasts, their abraded shapes, and the grain-size characteristics of the fine fraction suggest that at least some of the material is basal in origin. In places where the exotics comprise most of the deposit then it is reasonable to suggest that the debris is directly related to the inflowing glaciers.
The incorporation of material by bottom freezing from an intermittently grounded ice shelf has been suggested both for the Ward Hunt (Reference Lyons and MiekleLyons and Miekle 1973) and the McMurdo (Reference Gow, Weeks, Hendrickson and RowlandGow and others 1965) ice shelves. In the case of George VI Ice Shelf there is evidence to support such an origin for much of the material. The presence and character of the debris bands and the existence of fine debris in the transparent ice is typical of bottom freezing (Reference WeertmanWeertman 1961). The freezing-on could occur at the point of grounding and this would explain the dominance of local rocks in most of the moraine. Whereas the δ180 determinations rule out the possibility of pure sea-water freezing onto the bottom, they suggest that the refreezing involves a net addition of fresh or brackish water. The value of –9.98°/∞ is particularly high for the Ablation Point latitude and is consistent with alteration by refreezing of isotopically heavier water (Peel, personal communication). Fresh water was found to underlie part of the McMurdo Ice Shelf (Reference Gow, Weeks, Hendrickson and RowlandGow and others 1965), and it occurs to a depth of 55 m in Ablation Lake which is less than 1 km distant from the ice exposure depicted in Figure 7 (Reference HeywoodHeywood 1977). It is notable that the brackish water freezing onto the bottom of the Ward Hunt Ice Shelf had similar values in the range of –13.22˚/∞ to –17.47˚/∞ (Reference Lyons, Savin and TamburiLyons and others 1971).
The third mechanism of debris incorporation.by ice sliding at the point of grounding 1S 1ikely to be a contributory process of entrainment. In this case, sliding ice is able to transport fragments of bedrock, especially large boulders, by plastic flow of ice around them. When the tractive force exerted by the ice overcomes frictional resistance then the rock clast will move. Some such process would help to explain the incorporation of large boulders of local origin which are not carried into the ice shelf by Alexander Island glaciers.
Once entrained in the ice shelf, processes of upward ice flow are necessary to transport basally-derived debris to the ice surface. One such process is upward flow in response to surface ablation and has long been recognized (Reference DebenhamDebenham 1920, Reference Swithinbank, Darby and WohlschlagSwithinbank and others 1961). In the case of George VI Ice Shelf, the zone of strong upward flow may be confined to the edge where locally increased ablation is related to the proximity of the ice-free slopes of Alexander Island. Thrusting along upward curving shear planes is a second process which may be important in transporting debris bearing ice to the ice-shelf surface. The dislocation of the melt-water tunnel is good evidence that thrusting occurs.
Melt-water processes
The influence of melt-water processes on the morphology and sediments of the ice-shelf moraine is profound. Along stretches of steep coast temporary lakes occur at intervals of 1 to 2 km. Generally the lakes occupy basins between the ice margin and the land and may be over 100 m across. Where there is a landward embayment larger lakes may build up. Periodically the lakes drain into the ice shelf via ice tunnels. A fine example was seen draining away on 10–11 January 1979. The lake was in an embayment south of Moutønnée Valley and at 1400 h on 10 January measured 1.4 x 0.2 km and was up to 10 m deep. Then, 24 hours later, approximately 1.12 m x 106m3 of water had drained through a sump 25 m wide and 10 m high at the intake. Afterwards water was flowing from the ice-shelf surface into the sump via a moulin. Former lake beaches occur both higher and lower than the one vacated in 1979, implying that the lake may reach different dimensions in different years before draining each summer. Old sumps were seen in association with other lake sites and it seems clear that there may be a regular cycle by which the marginal lakes build up before draining suddenly through the ice.
The lakes seem typical of those discharging englacially whereby, after an initial seepage is established, outflow accelerates rapidly due to the widening of the tunnel by melting (Reference RӧthlisbergerRӧthlisberger 1972). The main point of interest is that, unlike many other instances of englacial drainage, here the lakes are draining through ice with a 10 m temperature of around –9˚C (Reference Martin and PeelMartin and Peel 1978). In this situation fracturing associated with both thrusting and tidal movements may make available passages for the initial seepage of melt water.
The lakes are important in influencing the morphology of the moraine in that the lake sumps occupy low points which become the focus of stream drainage. Thus a walk along the depression between the morainic ridges or between the moraine and the land involves passing through a series of local stream basins 1 to 2 km across, each focused on a lake sump. The lakes also modify the sediments in and on the moraine. The ice-cored ridge in the vicinity of the lake that was observed to drain away was almost wholly comprised of beach shingle. Finer lacustrine silts may also be incorporated in flow till sequences on the ice-cored moraine and occur in depressions between the ridges.
Tidal lake processes
Characteristics of the tidal lakes in Ablation and Moutonnée valleys are well described by Reference HeywoodHeywood (1977). In both lakes a fresh-water layer overlies sea-water. In Ablation Lake the fresh-water layer is 55 m thick while in Moutonnée Lake it is around 33 m thick. In Ablation Lake salinity measurements show that the tidal fluctuations involve the inflow and outflow of sea-water beneath the ice shelf. In the case of Moutonnée Lake the exchange is an intermediate brackish layer which corresponds to the depth of the sill on which the ice shelf grounds. Both lakes are covered by ice throughout the year which is 4.0 to 4.5 m thick in winter and 2.6 to 3.0 m thick in summer (Fig.3). Remarkably, Heywood found both a marine fauna, including the fish Trematomus bernachii, in the bottom of Ablation Lake and a sparse fresh-water fauna in the upper layers, notably a fresh-water calanoid. Streams flow into both lakes and are constructing fans and deltas. Presumably the sediments in the upper part of the delta will be accumulating in fresh-water conditions, while in the deeper portions of the lake sedimentation is taking place in marine conditions complete with a marine fauna. Thus a variety of other landforms and sediments associated with the presence of such tidal lakes become part of the ice-shelf moraine complex.
Age relationships
The only clue to the age of the ice-shelf moraine is that the barnacles in the subdued ridge at Two Step Cliffs are 6 000 to 6 500 14C a, an age which agrees with the amino acid analyses (Reference Sugden and ClappertonSugden and Clapperton 1980). The position of the shells shows that both moraines must be younger than 6 000 to 6 500 14C a.
A model of the ice-shelf moraine
Figure 8 is an attempt to portray the processes associated with the formation of the ice-shelf moraine in George VI Sound. Glaciers discharging from the Antarctic Peninsula flow across the sound as an ice shelf and transport basal debris from the peninsula. This implies there can be little bottom melting beneath the ice shelf. The ice shelf grounds against Alexander Island and varying quantities of local Alexander Island debris are incorporated by freezing and glacier sliding. Surface ablation and thrusting allow basal debris to move upwards to the ice surface where it forms an ice-cored moraine.
As the coast steepens the grounding line nears the coast, so the proportion of exotic debris in the moraine increases and the resulting ridge complex narrows. Conversely, if the coast is shallow, the more extensive will be the zone of grounding, and so the higher will be the proportion of local rock debris, and the broader will be the belt of moraine topography. Melt-water processes are highly important in modifying the morphology and sediments in the moraine. The most important effect is to create lake basins which act as local base levels for streams flowing parallel to the moraine and which periodically drain through the ice shelf. The net result is an approximately horizontal moraine occurring on coastal forelands over a distance of 120 km but with a locally undulating long profile. The sediments in the moraine may comprise local or exotic till or any combination of the two, fluvio-glacial and lacustrine sediments, and in places, a marine fauna.
Before this model can be applied elsewhere it is wise to stress the major constraints influencing the formation of the ice-shelf moraine in George VI Sound. These constraints are both glaciological and topographic. The main glaciological constraint is that the mass balance of the ice shelf must be sufficient to cause the ice shelf to cross the sound, but little more. Only in such a situation can surface ablation and compressive thrusting bring rock debris to the surface. If the mass balance were markedly higher and surface ablation unimportant, then basal material would remain within the ice. This situation applies at either end of George VI Sound where the mass balance is higher (Reference WagerWager 1972) and no marginal moraine occurs. The mass balance of the ice shelf also influences flow lines. If it was higher, then ice flow would tend to be towards the north or south along the sound rather than across it. This change would modify lithological patterns and presumably reduce the exotic content of the moraine. Finally the mass balance influences the altitude of the moraine. Where the ice shelf is thinner the moraine will be lower and vice versa. This factor probably contributes to deviations from the true horizontal in the case of the existing moraine. A stronger component of flow along the sound would create a slight overall gradient to the moraine.
The topography of the grounding zone is another fundamentally important variable. Intuitively one can argue that the coast on which the moraine forms needs to be sufficiently steep to allow the floating ice shelf to come close inshore before grounding and yet it needs to be sufficiently gentle to allow the moraine to accumulate. The block-faulted eastern margin of Alexander Island may just represent the optimum topographic situation. It is tempting to speculate on the situation where, as is common, the coast is gentler. Perhaps the tidal lakes are analogies of this situation. Here the ice shelf first touches bottom well offshore and, as in the case of Ablation Lake, pushes onshore in a series of pressure ridges for about 1 km before terminating in a tidal lake in water 50 to 70 m deep. In such situations one can envisage submerged moraines forming at the edge of the ice shelf. Depending on local conditions, this moraine could consist of varying proportions of glacial, marine, lacustrine, or stream deposits, and be mixed with a marine or fresh-water fauna, or both at the same time.
Acknowledgements
We thank the Natural Environment Research Council and the British Antarctic Survey for support. We are very grateful for help provided by Professor Dansgaard, Dave England, Dr Hjort, Mrs Kennedy, Dr Newman, Professor Oldfield, Dr Shaw, and Dr Swithinbank.