Abstract

Pluridisciplinary fieldwork highlights features generated by an extended ice-sheet in the Djado Basin during the Hirnantian. Two glacial palaeovalley systems associated with glacial pavements and separated by thin glaciomarine interstadial series are revealed. Rigid glacial pavements characterised by abrasion erosion are differentiated from soft glacial pavements characterised by soft-bed deformation. Glacial pavements are associated with subglacial bedforms such as megaflutes, flutes and meltwater channels. They are also associated with clastic dykes and glaciotectonic structures such as deformed flutes, subglacial folds and duplex structures. This record demonstrates that ice was warm-based and flowed rapidly on the highfluid- pressure soft substrate, as for ice streams. The erosional glacial landscape is typical of areal scouring, and the depositional sediment-landform assemblage corresponds to subglacial processes. These data afford a reconstruction of glacial events which is consistent with the two polyphased low-frequency glacial cycles inferred in previous studies. During interstadial and postglacial stages, grabens, normal faults, radial extensional microfaults and extensional dihedrons were generated by extensional tectonics during glacio-isostatic rebound. In sectors highly affected by this tectonics, doleritic dykes reflect a basal crust fusion increase induced by adiabatic decompression.

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