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dc.contributor.authorBjornstad, N., Bruce
dc.date.accessioned2014-06-29T13:03:56Z
dc.date.available2014-06-29T13:03:56Z
dc.date.issued2014-06-29
dc.identifier.citationE&G – Quaternary Science Journal; Vol.63, No.1, p.44-59
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-1735-0000-0023-B181-9
dc.description.abstractExotic ice-rafted debris from the breakup of ice-dammed glacial lakes Missoula and Columbia is common in slackwater areas along the 1,100-km route for outburst floods in the northwestern US. A detailed analysis was performed at Rattlesnake Mountain, which lay beyond the limit of the former ice sheet, where an exceptionally high concentration of ice-rafted debris exists midway along the floods’ path. Here floodwaters temporarily rose to 380 m elevation (forming short-lived Lake Lewis) behind the first substantial hydraulic constriction for the outburst floods near Wallula Gap. Within the 60 km2 study area more than 2,100 erratic isolates and clusters, as well as bergmounds were recorded. Three quarters of erratic boulders are of an exotic granitic composition, which stand in stark contrast to dark Columbia River basalt, the sole bedrock in the region. Other exotics include Proterozoic quartzite and argillite as well as gneiss, diorite, schist and gabbro, all once in direct contact with the Cordilleran Ice Sheet to the north. Most ice-rafted debris is concentrated between 200 and 300 m elevation. Far fewer erratics and bergmounds lie above 300 m elevation because of the preponderance of less-than-maximum floods. Plus, larger deep-rooted icebergs were forced to ground farther away from the ancient shorelines of transient Lake Lewis. As floodwaters moved across the uneven surface of Rattlesnake Mountain, many erratic-bearing icebergs congregated into pre-existing gullies that trend crosswise to flood flow.
dc.language.isoeng
dc.publisherGeozon Science Media
dc.relation.ispartofseriesE&G – Quaternary Science Journal
dc.subject.ddc551.7
dc.titleIce-Rafted Erratics and Bergmounds from Pleistocene Outburst Floods, Rattlesnake Mountain, Washington, USA
dc.typearticle
dc.bibliographicCitation.volume63
dc.bibliographicCitation.issue1
dc.bibliographicCitation.firstPage44
dc.bibliographicCitation.lastPage59
dc.identifier.doi10.3285/eg.63.1.03
dc.identifier.doi10.23689/fidgeo-1975
dc.type.versionVerlagsversion
dc.rights.holderGeozon Science Media
dc.date.updated2014-06-29T13:03:56Z
dc.subject.freeice-rafted debris
dc.subject.freeerratic
dc.subject.freebergmound
dc.subject.freeMissoula floods
dc.subject.freeWallula Gap
dc.subject.freeLake Lewis
dc.subject.freeglacial Lake Missoula
dc.subject.freeWisconsin Glaciation
dc.subject.freeColumbia River basalt
dc.relation.volumeE&G – Quaternary Science Journal; Vol.63
dc.bibliographicCitation.journalE&G – Quaternary Science Journal
dc.relation.collectionGeologische Wissenschaften
dc.description.typeresearch


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