Introduction
The topography on glaciers is not generally thought of in terms of the karst cycle, and karst terminology is seldom applied to the topographic features of glaciers (Reference CharlesworthCharlesworth, 1957, p. 58 and 61). However, solution features do form on soluble rocks other than limestone and dolomite (gypsum and rock salt, for example), and Reference GravenorGravenor (1955, p. 476–77) has suggested that a stagnant ice sheet is in many respects similar to a limestone formation, and may develop “ice-sinks” when the roofs of ice caves collapse. Although the process involved on glaciers is melting rather than solution, the results are nearly the same, and (especially on stagnant, drift-covered glaciers) most of the usual karst features may result.
Well-developed karst topography is found on only a few present-day glaciers. It is especially conspicuous on the stagnant and drift-covered margin of the Malaspina Glacier in southern Alaska, where it has been described in detail by Reference Tarr and MartinTarr and Martin (1914, p. 205–28) and Reference RussellRussell (1901, p. 112–21), who, however, did not use karst terminology. The Martin River Glacier, 200 km. west of the Malaspina, is used in the discussion that follows to illustrate well-developed glacial karst; it was investigated during June, July, and August 1962.
Karst topography was apparently more widespread on former glaciers. During late Wisconsin time continental glaciers in large parts of Saskatchewan, Alberta (Reference Gravenor and KupschGravenor and Kupsch, 1959), and North Dakota (Reference ClaytonClayton, 1963), stagnated on a large scale. In these and similar areas the glacial karst topography resulted in the formation of dead-ice moraine and other associated stagnation landforms. An understanding of how karst topography develops on present-day glaciers is therefore important in interpreting these significant landforms in the northern Great Plains.
Conditions Necessary for the Formation of Glacial Karst
Reference ThornburyThornbury (1954, p. 317–18) lists four conditions necessary for the formation of karst topography:
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Soluble rocks. Glacial ice is melted rather than dissolved, but for purposes of karst formation melting gives the same results.
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Dense, highly jointed rocks. Glacier ice is dense and impermeable and is usually well jointed.
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Low ground-water base level. Glacial karst topography forms only where the melt water can seep through the glacier and be drained away from the margin.
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At least moderate rainfall. Glacial melt water adds to or takes the place of moderate rainfall.
In addition the glacier must be stagnant and drift-covered. If it were not stagnant the glacier movement would destroy any karst topography before it could fully develop. A cover of ablation till is required because its insulating effect decreases general surface ablation and preserves the stagnant glacier long enough for the more local karst ablation to form full-scale karst features. The irregular cover of ablation till also increases the irregularity of melting of the surface of the nearly homogeneous glacier ice.
Martin River Glacier
The Martin River Glacier, between the Copper River delta and the Bering Glacier in south-central Alaska, is an example of a glacier with well-developed karst topography (Fig. 1). Twenty-four kilometres above its terminus the glacier leaves the Chugach Mountains and spreads out into a piedmont or expanded-foot glacier, which is confined between the mountains and the foothills. Here it is as much as 10 km. wide. The terminal 4 km. are covered with superglacial ablation till varying in thickness from several centimetres near the centre to more than 3 m. along the outer edge of the glacier. The terminal 1 to 3 km. of the glacier are stagnant.
Most of the ablation till originated by the concentration of subglacial debris that had been carried up into the glacier along imbricate thrust planes where the active ice was thrust up over less active or stagnant ice. The cover of ablation till causes the lower end of the glacier to melt much more slowly than the cleaner parts of it; the most recently formed marginal moraine is adjacent to the lower end of the glacier, but it is well above the glacier several kilometres from its terminus—the slope of the upper surface of the glacier is becoming flatter and the lobe is becoming much thinner but maintaining a constant length. This results in increased terminal stagnation. Active ice is being thrust up over this newly stagnant ice, dragging more subglacial debris into the upper parts of the glacier, thus increasing the thickness of the ablation till. This new ablation till, in turn, further decreases melting, lowers surface slope, increases thinning of the lobe, and so forth. Thus, the stagnant part of the glacier is, in part at least, self-perpetuating. Well-developed glacial karst features therefore have had an opportunity to be formed over most of this terminal part of the Martin River Glacier.
Glacial Karst Features
The most striking karst features on the Martin River Glacier are funnel-shaped sink-holes. As can be seen in Figure 2, most are 60 to 370 m. across, and there are as many as thirty in a square kilometre. They are 15 to 90 m. deep and many hold small lakes. Sink-holes are also the most conspicuous karst feature on the stagnant part of the Malaspina Glacier (Reference RussellRussell, 1901, p. 115–17).
Funnel-shaped sink-holes apparently were also very abundant on some parts of the stagnant glaciers in the northern Great Plains of North America in late Wisconsin time. Where the ablation till was thick and had a high silt and clay content, it flowed into the sinkholes and, when the glacial topography was inverted, formed the “prairie mounds” and “circular disintegration ridges” that are common there today (Reference GravenorGravenor, 1955; Reference Gravenor and KupschGravenor and Kupsch, 1959, p. 52–53)
Many variations from the simple funnel-shaped sink-hole occur on the Martin River Glacier. Two or more commonly coalesce to form compound sink-holes. Several examples of karst windows, or the unroofed parts of subglacial streams, occur. Some karst windows have enlarged to form glacial uvallas; a stream flows from one side of the uvalla, across its gravel bottom, and into another tunnel at the other side. A lake
km. long and km. wide near the terminus of the glacier occupies a superglacial polje. The glacial uvallas and poljes that are bottomed on solid ground and floored with lake sediment or outwash may result in landforms that are nearly identical to the “ice-walled outwash plains” and “ice-walled lake plains” in North Dakota (Reference ClaytonClayton, 1963). Another type of glacial sink-hole on the Martin River Glacier is the shaftlike sink-hole or moulin. It is the result of “solution” alone, rather than collapse. Moulins are not funnel-shaped depressions but are vertical cylindrical holes a few metres in diameter and probably more than 30 m. deep. They are abundant only on the active part of the glacier.Other karst features that are extremely abundant in the Martin River Glacier are ice caves and tunnels. In the stagnant part of the glacier most of the drainage is subglacial and is continually shifting as tunnels are abandoned and new ones formed. Many of the caves and tunnels are 3 m. or more high and more than 2 km. long. One small network of tunnels near the end of the “Charlotte lobe” (see Fig. 1) of the Martin River Glacier was explored. It was floored with gravel, in places had gravel terraces along its sides, and had one or two side tunnels that were completely clogged with gravel. Conspicuous occurrences of superposed ice and icicles—the glacial equivalent of drip-stone and stalactites were not observed in any of the ice caves during the summer; moisture and a “thumb-print” surface (Reference CharlesworthCharlesworth, 1957, p. 58) on the walls of the caves indicate that summer ablation inside the caves is too high for their preservation.
Other common karst features on the Martin River Glacier include sinking streams, dry stream beds, blind valleys, and large springs. Small natural bridges occur in some places. Lapiés, an “etched, pitted, grooved, fluted, and otherwise rugged surface” (Reference ThornburyThornbury, 1954, p. 319), occurs in many places but is not as well developed as in limestone karst areas. The equivalent of hums—the erosional remnants of limestone—are the isolated blocks of ice beyond the end of the glacier; these glacial hums may become covered with outwash and then melt out, forming kettles.
Ablation till is the glacial karst equivalent of the residual soils, including “terra rossa”, that accumulate in limestone karst areas. Both ablation till and the residual soils consist of the “non-soluble impurities” in the “dissolved” rock, and both increase in thickness as the karst cycle progresses. Little life exists where the ablation till is only centimetres thick near the centre of the Martin River Glacier, but stunted spruce, hemlock, alders, and willows grow where it is
m. thick. Thick alder scrub covers the ablation till where it is to m. thick. The ablation till is very unstable in this area; it is constantly sliding down the steep sides of the numerous sink-holes. Where the ablation till is to 3 m. or more thick it is very stable and supports a full grown spruce-hemlock forest that is more than 100 years old. In this stable area the lakes in the large sinkholes are well insulated from the glacier by the ablation till; they are warm and clear and support the normal freshwater plants and animals of the region. In parts of the northern Great Plains in late Wisconsin time the superglacial ablation till was also apparently quite thick; it was let down when the glaciers melted to form the widespread dead-ice moraine (Reference Gravenor and KupschGravenor and Kupsch, 1959; Reference ClaytonClayton, 1963).It can thus be seen that most karst features found in limestone areas may also occur on glaciers, especially stagnant, drift-covered ones. Where these features occur in great abundance the resulting topography can logically be referred to as “karst topography”.
Karst Cycle
The karst cycle, as summarized by Reference ThornburyThornbury (1954, p. 349–52), can also be applied to glaciers as well as to limestone areas. The glacial karst cycle, as illustrated by the Martin River Glacier, is outlined in Table I. The cycle begins when the ice is exposed from under the melting firn; it progresses to maturity as the drainage becomes sub-surface, the glacier stagnates, the ablation till thickens, and funnel-shaped sink-holes become conspicuous; and it ends when the last ice hums have melted and the drainage is again at the surface.
Summary
Most of the features th at constitute karst topography in limestone areas can also occur on stagnant glaciers. Limestone and glacial karst features form by similar processes, and they both evolve through the same karst cycle. Although glacial karst topography occurs today in only a few places, such as the lower ends of the Martin River and Malaspina Glaciers, it common ly occurred in late Wisconsin time in the northern Great Plains of North America and was responsible for many of the glacial landforms that occur there today.
Acknowledgement
The Martin River Glacier was studied during the summer or 1962 by a University of North Dakota party under the support of the National Science Foundation. Other members of the party, besides myself, were Dr. W. M. Laird, Dr. J. R. Reid, and Mr. S. J. Tuthill, whom I thank for reading and criticizing the manuscript of this paper.