Genesis of dispersal plumes in till – R. Hooke et al. Canadian Journal of Earth Scieces

Abstract

In regions formerly covered by continental ice, till sheets 05 contain distinctive clastic particles derived from local bedrock sources such as ore bodies. Such particles, especially in thicker tills, 05 be distributed in three-dimensional dispersal trains or plumes. Developments in our understanding of glacial erosion, entrainment, and deposition over the past two or three decades help clarify formation of these plumes. Much of the debris in the basal ice of ice sheets is likely incorporated at places where water is freezing onto the base of the ice sheet. This water, largely a product of melting of basal ice further upglacier, has migrated downglacier under the influence of a gradient in the hydraulic potential controlled primarily by the ice surface slope and secondarily by basal topography and thermal regime. Refreezing occurs over a substantial distance along flow, so as the ice moves away from an ore body, material eroded from the body is later elevated above the bed by refreezing of more meltwater, incorporating additional material derived from the country rock. Broadening and mixing of the plume, both vertically and horizontally, can occur by shear in the ice, by shifting ice flow directions, by collisions between particles, and by folding of basal ice layers. Further down-flow, when net basal melting resumes, the debris is deposited by melt-out or lodgement. Many idiosyncrasies of dispersal plumes are likely caused by non-steady-state changes in basal thermal regime.

Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 10.1139/cjes-2013-0018