Abstract

This article describes the well-exposed landform/sediment assemblage of a Pliocene palaeouvala and Pleistocene (Saalian) ice-pushed ridge in a large quarry in Upper Cretaceous marls near Rejowiec, eastern Poland. The site provides a rare opportunity to study the development of glacial depositional and deformational processes on morphologically and structurally variable bedrock. The internal structures of both chronostratigraphic units which comprise this assemblage provide evidence of two principal stages of deformation associated with an ice advance on a karstified foreland, each stage preceded by stabilization of the ice mass. The first deformational stage was characterized by the development of imbricate structures in outwash sediments (the initial ice-pushed ridge) and listric faults at the contact between the bedrock and palaeouvala fills (caused by an increasing ice load). Shallow subglacial folding of the proximal fan deposits, and a listric thrust which limited the extent of the ice-pushed ridge under development occurred in the second deformational stage. The data assembled indicate that the formation of push moraines (in a general sense) during ice-sheet advance is controlled by the substratum undulations. Closed depressions with loose fills in the foreland of advancing ice sheets can control the deformational style, geometry and extent (both lateral and vertical) of the push moraines.

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