Abstract

AbstractIn parts of the core area of the Fennoscandian ice sheet relict periglacial surfaces occur. The boundary between periglacial and glacial landscapes is often sharp and erosional, with fluting truncating patterned ground. The periglacial surfaces are older than the last ice sheet and are interpreted to represent patches of continuous frozen-bed conditions. A specific land-form assemblage occurs at the edges of such patches. On the basis of three type localities along the eastern rim of the Scandinavian mountains, four thermal boundary land forms, characteristic of the frozen-patch environment, are defined. Stoss-side moraines and transverse till scarps, not previously described, are interpreted to have formed in detachment zones where soil frozen to the glacier overlies thawed soil. The detachment zones are located where subglacial warming raises the phase-change surface (water/ice) until it intersects the soil layer up-and down-glacier from residual frozen-bed patches. The up-glacier ends of frozen-bed patches are located on topographic highs, but down-glacier the location of lateral sliding boundaries is occasionally independent of topography. The identification of relict surfaces and thermal boundary forms can improve paleo-ice-sheet models by providing estimates of the extent of frozen-bed conditions.

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