Abstract

Abstract Two types of rock glacier occur in the Colorado Front Range. Rock glaciers on the floors of modern cirques closely resemble the tongues of small valley glaciers. Because they contain cores of banded glacial ice and grade up-valley into lateral moraines, rock glaciers of this type are believed to represent the debris-covered tongues of former glaciers. Most consist of two or more superimposed lobes, bounded by longitudinal furrows, and resulting from independent ice advances. Despite their compound nature, the complexes now appear to be moving down-slope as single units. Two generations of “cirque-floor” rock glaciers, both tentatively dated as being of post-Pleistocene age, occur in the Front Range. Rock glaciers of an entirely different character occur beneath steep valley walls, where they are supplied with debris by avalanche couloirs. Interstitial ice, responsible for the movement of “valley-wall” rock glaciers, probably results from the metamorphism of snow buried beneath rock-fall debris or supplied by winter avalanching.

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