Microstructural evidence of low-strain, time-transgressive subglacial deformation

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Microstructural evidence of low-strain, time-transgressive subglacial deformation. / Larsen, N. K.; Piotrowski, J. A.; Menzies, J.

In: Journal of Quaternary Science, Vol. 22, No. 6, 2007, p. 593-608.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Larsen, NK, Piotrowski, JA & Menzies, J 2007, 'Microstructural evidence of low-strain, time-transgressive subglacial deformation', Journal of Quaternary Science, vol. 22, no. 6, pp. 593-608. https://doi.org/10.1002/jqs.1085

APA

Larsen, N. K., Piotrowski, J. A., & Menzies, J. (2007). Microstructural evidence of low-strain, time-transgressive subglacial deformation. Journal of Quaternary Science, 22(6), 593-608. https://doi.org/10.1002/jqs.1085

Vancouver

Larsen NK, Piotrowski JA, Menzies J. Microstructural evidence of low-strain, time-transgressive subglacial deformation. Journal of Quaternary Science. 2007;22(6):593-608. https://doi.org/10.1002/jqs.1085

Author

Larsen, N. K. ; Piotrowski, J. A. ; Menzies, J. / Microstructural evidence of low-strain, time-transgressive subglacial deformation. In: Journal of Quaternary Science. 2007 ; Vol. 22, No. 6. pp. 593-608.

Bibtex

@article{9cfdbf3f730047f087f25392723d08b4,
title = "Microstructural evidence of low-strain, time-transgressive subglacial deformation",
abstract = "Microstructural analyses were used to investigate the formation of a macroscale-massive till at Knud Strand in Denmark. More than 100 thin sections were examined and microstructures mapped and counted for quantitative comparison and interpretation. Microstructures indicative of both brittle (grain lineations, edge-to-edge crushed grains) and ductile (turbate structures) deformation are evenly distributed in vertical profiles through the till, suggesting that strain contributed to its formation. Discrete shears (grain lineations and plasmic fabric) probably accommodated most deformation, whereas rotational deformation was less prominent. The microshear geometry fits the predicted Coulomb-Mohr failure criterion, indicating that till behaves as a plastic material. Strain estimate of ca. 101 from micromorphological proxies is two-three orders of magnitude lower than expected if the till was subjected to pervasive deformation. A hybrid of lodgement and time-transgressive deformation is envisaged as the till-forming processes. Our data suggest that even abundant evidence of microscale deformation at continuing high levels of strain may only record the latest process of deposition and deformation and therefore not fully reflect the complexity of till genesis.",
keywords = "Micromorphology, Microshears, Strain, Subglacial processes, Till genesis",
author = "Larsen, {N. K.} and Piotrowski, {J. A.} and J. Menzies",
year = "2007",
doi = "10.1002/jqs.1085",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
pages = "593--608",
journal = "Journal of Quaternary Science",
issn = "0267-8179",
publisher = "JohnWiley & Sons Ltd",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Microstructural evidence of low-strain, time-transgressive subglacial deformation

AU - Larsen, N. K.

AU - Piotrowski, J. A.

AU - Menzies, J.

PY - 2007

Y1 - 2007

N2 - Microstructural analyses were used to investigate the formation of a macroscale-massive till at Knud Strand in Denmark. More than 100 thin sections were examined and microstructures mapped and counted for quantitative comparison and interpretation. Microstructures indicative of both brittle (grain lineations, edge-to-edge crushed grains) and ductile (turbate structures) deformation are evenly distributed in vertical profiles through the till, suggesting that strain contributed to its formation. Discrete shears (grain lineations and plasmic fabric) probably accommodated most deformation, whereas rotational deformation was less prominent. The microshear geometry fits the predicted Coulomb-Mohr failure criterion, indicating that till behaves as a plastic material. Strain estimate of ca. 101 from micromorphological proxies is two-three orders of magnitude lower than expected if the till was subjected to pervasive deformation. A hybrid of lodgement and time-transgressive deformation is envisaged as the till-forming processes. Our data suggest that even abundant evidence of microscale deformation at continuing high levels of strain may only record the latest process of deposition and deformation and therefore not fully reflect the complexity of till genesis.

AB - Microstructural analyses were used to investigate the formation of a macroscale-massive till at Knud Strand in Denmark. More than 100 thin sections were examined and microstructures mapped and counted for quantitative comparison and interpretation. Microstructures indicative of both brittle (grain lineations, edge-to-edge crushed grains) and ductile (turbate structures) deformation are evenly distributed in vertical profiles through the till, suggesting that strain contributed to its formation. Discrete shears (grain lineations and plasmic fabric) probably accommodated most deformation, whereas rotational deformation was less prominent. The microshear geometry fits the predicted Coulomb-Mohr failure criterion, indicating that till behaves as a plastic material. Strain estimate of ca. 101 from micromorphological proxies is two-three orders of magnitude lower than expected if the till was subjected to pervasive deformation. A hybrid of lodgement and time-transgressive deformation is envisaged as the till-forming processes. Our data suggest that even abundant evidence of microscale deformation at continuing high levels of strain may only record the latest process of deposition and deformation and therefore not fully reflect the complexity of till genesis.

KW - Micromorphology

KW - Microshears

KW - Strain

KW - Subglacial processes

KW - Till genesis

U2 - 10.1002/jqs.1085

DO - 10.1002/jqs.1085

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:34548443737

VL - 22

SP - 593

EP - 608

JO - Journal of Quaternary Science

JF - Journal of Quaternary Science

SN - 0267-8179

IS - 6

ER -

ID: 235142261