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Observations of iceberg rafting in Glacier Bay, Alaska, and the identification of ancient ice-rafted deposits

March 1, 1970

Observations of icebergs in a modern glacial marine environment indicate that ancient rocks that received iceberg-rafted material should contain: (1) local concentrations of stones that originated when icebergs overturned, and (2) small pellets of till that were originally sediment filling the spaces between clear ice crystals.

The till pellets are especially significant in identifying an ancient glacial setting because they originate through a process unique to glaciers—the flow-and recrystallization-induced segregation of originally disseminated fine sediment. Thus when freed by melting and deposited by iceberg rafting, the pellets would reliably indicate the presence of glacial ice in an ancient environment. In the Gowganda Formation, a Precambrian glacial deposit, strata that contain outsized, presumably iceberg-rafted stones also contain abundant small flattened clasts of unsorted graywacke interpreted as the lithified counterparts of the till pellets observed on modern icebergs.

Publication Year 1970
Title Observations of iceberg rafting in Glacier Bay, Alaska, and the identification of ancient ice-rafted deposits
DOI 10.1130/0016-7606(1970)81[891:OOIRIG]2.0.CO;2
Authors A. Thomas Ovenshine
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Bulletin of the Geological Society of America
Index ID 70226789
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse