Introduction
In December 1962, we found east–west trending glacial striations and grooves on the immit ridge of Observation Hill, adjacent to McMurdo Naval Air Facility (Figs. 1 and 2).
Observation Hill is a familiar landmark to those who have worked and visited in the IcMurdo Sound region, and it is often climbed by personnel wishing to visit Scott’s cross, Which is on the summit.
Observation Hill has been discussed previously by Reference FerrarFerrar (1907), Reference David and PriestleyDavid and Priestley (1914), Reference TaylorTaylor (1922) and Reference DebenhamDebenham (1923). These authors have treated Observation Hill ad the “Gap” (Fig. 2) as glaciated landforms, but we have found no reference to glacial nations and/or grooves in these discussions.
Location and Description of Lineations
Striations (Fig. 3) were found at four localities on the outcrops of trachyte which form the tmmit ridge (shown as localities Nos. 1, 2, 3, and 4 on Figure 5A). Locality No. 4 also isplays deep grooves which transect the striations at angles ranging between to and 20 egrees (Fig. 4). All localities are on the crest of the ridge, or on the west slope adjacent to te crest, but many outcrops on the east slope are mantled by rubble, and additional lineation:currcnces may be concealed by this cover. The strike of the striations ranges from 250 to 70 degrees, and the average strike of the deep grooves at locality No. 4 is 280 degrees. The:titudes of the striations and grooves are discordant to layering and flow structures in the achytes.
Weathered and indistinct features similar to chatter marks and friction cracks also occur, but they do not appear to offer definitive evidence for the direction of ice movement.
Stepped outcrops occur on the west slope, adjacent to the crest, which suggest ice quarrying. However, the east dip of the trachyte flows on the summit ridge would encourage tarrying on the west slope whether the ice moved east or west.
Geomorphological evidence for the direction of ice movement seems to be inconclusive, but the correlation of striation and groove orientations with current ice movement vectors east of the Hut Point peninsula may be significant.
Parallelism of Glacial Lineations and Ice Shelf Movement Vectors
We were first impressed by the approximate parallelism of the glacial striations and grooves on Observation Hill to present ice shelf movement directions, when we noted the vectors computed by Reference MacdonaldMacdonald (1961) from observations made during 1957–58; and more recently, to those presented by Reference Stuart and BullStuart and Bull (1963) for a larger segment of the ice shelf during 1959–60 (Fig. 5B). The westernmost part of the McMurdo Ice Shelf is currently moving due west.
This parallelism suggests that Observation Hill was glaciated by an enlarged lobe of the adjacent McMurdo Ice Shelf; moving westward as today. A lobe capable of inundating the 747 ft. (227 m.) summit of Observation Hill would have been grounded on the adjacent bottom of McMurdo Sound. The minimal total thickness of such a lobe would probably exceed 800 m. (considering such variables as a possible 150 m. depression of sea-level during the Würm glaciation, as proposed by Reference HollinHollin (1962), and isostatic complications).
An alternative explanation would be glaciation by ice descending from Victoria Land, moving to the east across McMurdo Sound to the Hut Point peninsula. Such a mass, in our opinion, would tend to flow north-east rather than east, and thence north along the axis of the McMurdo Sound embayment (Fig. 1).
The glaciation of the 747 ft. (227 m.) summit ridge may correlate with the elevation of moraines containing continental rock types at Boo ft. (244 m.) above sea-level, and higher, near Capes Crozier and Royds, to the north and north-east of the Hut Point peninsula on Ross Island (Fig. 1). Recently Reference SpedenSpeden (1962) has described glacial striations on an outcrop of tuffaceous sediments containing Quaternary marine fossils, 600 ft. (182 m.) above sea-level on Black Island, and moraines at the 800 ft. (244 m.) level on Brown Island. However, glacial lineations, erratics and moraines have been widely reported from many localities in the Ross Archipelago, at elevations ranging from sea-level to at least 2,000 ft. (610 m.) above sea-level, and the glacial history is clearly complex and multicyclic.
Although the glaciation of Observation Hill and the previously cited localitites above Capes Royds and Crozier may represent the same event, no attempt is made here to correlate the glaciation of Observation Hill with one of the four regional glacial stages proposed by previous workers. Reference PéwéPéwé (1960) has recognized four successive Quaternary glaciations in the McMurdo Sound region, each less extensive than the former; and Reference BullBull and others (1962) have proposed a similar glacial history, based on their studies of the Wright and Victoria Valley systems.
Regional Implications
The east—west orientation of the striations and grooves on the summit of Observation Hill may be important to the reconstruction of the glacial history of the region. If westward movement prevailed, as today, and the McMurdo lobe of the Ross Ice Shelf glaciated Observation Hill, the flow of ice from the Victoria Land glaciers, including the Koettlitz Glacier stream, seems to have had little diversionary effect on the flow of the western part of the McMurdo Ice Shelf.
This possible anomaly suggests that further work should be done to determine whether the maximum development of outlet and alpine glaciers of Victoria Land, west of McMurdo Sound, was in phase with the growth of the ice shelf during the glaciation of Observation Hill. For, if the outlet and alpine glaciers of south Victoria Land were not in phase with the ice shelf maximum, the McMurdo lobe which inundated Observation Hill may have extended across McMurdo Sound to coastal Victoria Land. If the re-entrant valley mouths were ice-free at that time, the ice shelf may have invaded these valleys.
Reference HollinHollin (1962) has suggested that glacial fluctuations in Antarctica may be more directly related to changes in sea-level than regional climatic trends, and he has presented convincing theoretical evidence for a probable northward advance of the Ross Ice Shelf, based on a fall in sea-level of 150 m. during the Würm glaciation. Hollin believes that such a depression of sea-level would ground large areas of the ice shelf, and that decreased ablation by bottom melting plus less calving at the ice shelf edge in a colder and shallower Ross Sea would cause the ice shelf to thicken and advance. In his discussion of the regional implications, Hollin states: “Consider some probable effects of a grounding of the Ross Ice Shelf. First, the appearance of the area would be different; horizontal surfaces would be replaced by complex ones which would rise steeply to one, two or three thousand meters. Secondly, the ‘dry valleys’ of Victoria Land would be filled not so much by the frequently postulated ‘ice floods from the interior to the west’ (though such may have occurred) as by the intrusion of ice lobes from the grounded shelf to the east.”
Reference NicholsNichols (1961) has distinguished three stages of glaciation in the eastern part of the Wright Valley, based on the westward flow of ice from the area presently occupied by the Wilson Piedmont Glacier (Fig. 1). Nichols also discovered pectens in stratified gravels in Wright Valley, nearly 40 km. from the present coastline. Reference BullBull (1962) states that these glaciations post-date the last continuous glacier which flowed from the inland ice plateau through the Wright Valley to the McMurdo Sound area; and he also cites Hollin’s theory of the grounded ice shelf as a possible explanation of the pecten occurrence in Wright Valley. Reference BullBull (1962) states that a grounded ice shelf which attained a parabolic surface profile as proposed by Hollin, would have a surface elevation of about 1,200 m. east of the Wright Valley; and that the total ice thickness near the Wilson Piedmont Glacier may have been between 1,500 and 2,000 m. (personal communication from C. Bull). Under such conditions, Bull believes that pectens could have been transported from an area previously occupied by the sea into the Wright Valley, although the glaciers flowing eastward from the inland ice plateau may have experienced little change.
Our findings may reinforce the views of Reference HollinHollin (1962) and others who have suggested that. the Wilson Piedmont Glacier may be a relict of a grounded Ross Ice Shelf, and that the glacial history of the “dry valleys” of Victoria Land may also involve invasion by the ice shelf from the east.
Acknowledgements
We wish to thank Drs. Troy L. Péwé and Carl Benson, of the Geology Department and the Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska, and Dr. Colin Bull, Institute of Polar Studies, The Ohio State University, for valuable discussions on the regional implications of the Observation Hill glaciation, and for their critical review of the manuscript.
The striation and groove localities were encountered during our work on the petrology of the ultrabasic inclusions in the volcanic rocks of the Hut Point peninsula, as supported by National Science Foundation grant No. G-23660.