Introduction
Whereas in areas of modern glaciation processes of glacier erosion and deposition can be observed directly, in areas of Pleistocene glaciation they must be reconstructed from an interpretation of the sediments. Fortunately most of the ancient processes seem to be comparable to those now in progress today. In this paper, a type of glaciofluvial erosion which cannot be observed directly in present-day glacier processes, and which is not yet fully understood, is discussed, as well as the composition of tills from the Saalian and Elsterian glaciations in the Hamburg area, north-west Germany (Fig. 1)
As northern Germany was covered by the margins of the Scandinavian ice sheet, deposition was the prevailing process. These diments are mainly composed of melt-water deposits, but also of deposits left by the glaciers themselves. The sediment cover of Pleistocene age which is found in the north German lowlands normally reaches a thickness of several metres. Two-thirds of this deposit consists of melt-water deposits; the rest is till material. In many cases a regular sequence of alternating glaciofluvial sands and tills can be found
The interpretation of glacial sediments is complicated as in some places this simple layering was disturbed by glacial thrusting. It must be remembered that not only deposition took place but also erosion, and in most cases acertain proportion of the glacial sediments was removed after deposition. Indeed, there are very few places in which a full sequence of the Pleistocene strata can be found today
It has been suggested that glacial sediments were subject to perpetual reworking by the advance of Pleistocene ice (Reference GillbergGillberg 1977, Reference MarcussenMarcussen 1978). Thus the latest deposits should comprise an almost total mixture of all older materials available. But in fact this is not the case. Although in some places reworking was important, normally tills and corresponding melt-water deposits have a characteristic composition which means that boulders may be counted or gravel analysed for strati graphical purposes(Reference EhlersEhlers 1978)
Till composition
In Hemmoor (Fig. 2) an almost complete Pleistocene profile was exposed just on top of the upper chalk (Reference EhlersEhlers 1979). The fine-gravel diagram shows that the chalk material has affectted the composition of the deposits very little. The Elsterian till, which lies directly on the soft white chalk, contains the lowest proportion of chalk and flint of all the exposed strata. In other places erosion and reworking were considerable, but this did not occur often. Figure 3 shows the fine-gravel analysis of a drilling in Hamburg-Eidelstedt, in which the Dren the till of the Saalian glaciation was found directly on top of Pliocene sands. In the basal till, there are large amounts of the characteristic Pliocene quartz grains, which contain in some cases remnants of deeply weathered feldspars, but the concentration of quartz decreases rapidly from the lower to the higher parts of the profile.
Mechanism of deposition
Most of the deposits of the Scandinavian ice sheet in north Germany are interpreted asbasal tills, although in some places flow tills, ablation tills, and water lain tills seem to be present. Most of the morainic material which later formed the basal till was transported in the basal layers of the inland ice. During this transport a certain amount of underlying material was always incorporated in the ice. This must have been the case especially when the underlying sediments were taking part in the glacier movement as suggested by Reference Boulton and JonesBoulton and Jones (1979). Thus the Elsterian tills always contain a certain amount of Tertiary material, and the younger tills always contain a certain amount of older till material. Despite this, tills of different ages can be distinguished as they all bear their individual characteristics
In western parts of north Germany and in the northern Netherlands a type of red till occurs which is entirely composed of material that has been transported a considerable distance(Reference MeyerMeyer 1976, Reference ZandstraZandstra 1977, Reference HöfleHöfle 1979, Reference MeyerMeyer, unpublished). Investigation of the indicator boulders points to an eastern Balticorigin. This till is always found on top of the usual sandy till of the Dren the (Saalian)ice advance. In some places the red till is mixed with the underlying sandy till, and the stratum is split up into a number of lenses which are more or less red and contain some clay. In its original composition this till contains neither quartz nor flint. This proves that the material must have been transported over hundreds of kilometres without any contact with the underlying sediments. It seems most likely that this transport took place englacially, and, perhaps, was accomplished by ice re advancing over dynamically-dead ice in an east-west direction during the late phase of the Dren the advance(Fig. 4). As the same features can be seen, although less-pronounced, in late Elsterian and late Weichselian deposits as wellas in the tills of the War the (Saalian) ice advance, this type of englacial transport must have played an important part in the glaciation of north Europe. Similar types of till have been described from North America (Reference Wickham and JohnsonWickham and Johnson 1981)
Mechanism of erosion
How did glacial erosion in north Germany take place? In some cases it may have been due to plucking or shearing (Reference Dreimanis and LeggetDreimanis 1976), but in the area under consideration melt water was usually the main eroding agent, not the ice
During the main glaciation vast amounts of melt water were released which ran off sub glacially to the glacier margins. As this melt water was confined in ice tunnels (Reference ShreveShreve 1972), it had considerable erosive power. The largest features formed by glacial action are not the well-known push moraines but the buried tunnel valleys found in the subsurface of north Germany. These valleys have a depth of more than 400m and a width of about 2000 to 3000 m. The courses of these fjord-like features can be followed from the coast of the Baltic Sea almost to the mid-German uplands. Valleys with a depth of more than 100m (Fig. 5) are to be found only north of a line from Twistringen in the west to Celle in the east. Maps of these valleys were presente drecently by Reference HinschHinsch (1979) and Reference Kuster and MeyerKuster and Meyer (1979)
The origin of the valleys is not completely known. Their immense over deepening and their net-like connections show that they were not formed as a fluvial system under subaerial conditions. Normally, till deposits are found only on top of the valley sediments and on the flanks, and not at the bottom. This indicates that these forms were probably built by subglacial meltwater which was under high hydrostatic pressure. No explanation can be offered yet for the almo sttotal absence of such features of Saalian age. All the big tunnel valleys seem to have been formed during the Elsterian glaciation
In the Hamburg area, where the subsurface has been drilled many times and is therefore well known, a number of interesting features have been revealed. Profiles drawn through the tunnel valleys indicate that they are of a trough-like form (Fig. 6). The flanks are oversteepened, and in many places slumping of Tertiary material into the valleys occurred. Even where the flanks consist of the very stable mica clay of upper Miocene age, big blocks slid downwards, probably under the pressure of the overlying ice. The big tunnel valleys were rapidly re-filled with sandy deposits mainly during the Elsterian, before the glaciofluvial processes taking place at the end of this glaciation were replaced by glaciolimnic ones. The tunnel valleys were transformed into ice-dammed lakes, in which the so-called Lauenburg clay was deposited. After the Holsteinian interglacial the tunnel valleys were so completely filled with sediments that they could not be re-activated during the Saalian glaciation
Concluding remarks
In the marginal areas of the Scandinavian ice sheet in north Germany the glaciers themselves had only limited erosive power, perhaps because the active areas do not appear to have been in contact with the underlying substratum. Thus erosion was mainly effected by subglacial melt-water streams which formed fjord-like tunnel valleys, at least during the first major inland glaciation. Why this process was not repeated during succeeding glaciations remains an open question