Abstract

The word “kame” is regarded by one usage as the Scottish equivalent of the Irish term “esker”; according to another usage, the terms are not synonymous, for an esker is regarded as the British representative of the Swedish “osar” and as a ridge of sand and gravel deposited along the course of a river within a glacier, while a kame is a ridge of similar materials deposited outside the glacier along its edge. The Polmont kame, as seen from the railway, strikingly resembles the Swedish osar; but it and those at Carstairs, the best known of Scottish kames, proved, on examination, not to have the cross-banding characteristic of osar, and to be marginal deposits. The typical Irish eskers are also marginal deposits (Gregory, “The Irish Eskers,” Phil. Trans., A, 210, pp. 115–51) and of the same origin as the Polmont and Carstairs kames. A few small Irish eskers have the structure of osar, while many are the remnants of denuded sheets of sand and gravel. I therefore suggested that the term esker, being Irish in origin, should be applied generally, as it is in Ireland, to hills of glacial sand and gravel.

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