Abstract

The fabrics of tills deposited by continental glaciers are usually assumed to reflect clast orientation during transportation and yet might only be imprinted during depositional processes. However, the striated surfaces of clasts must be acquired during transportation and by relating striation patterns to clast shape one can deduce the positions most frequently maintained by each group of clasts. Comparison of these orientations with the actual depositional fabrics of the same shape groups, demonstrates that dast orientations are maintained from transportation through deposition. Therefore subglacial transportation processes grade smoothly into those of deposition. The favoured interpretation is that bottom melting is the dominant mechanism leading to final deposition and that lodgement and smearing are likely restricted more to preliminary cycles of redeposition and re-erosion.

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