Introduction
Modern Arctic glaciers provide excellent opportunities for the study of debris in transport because of the combination of relatively clean ice surfaces, steep-sided margins and, occasionally, tidewater cliff sections. It is thus possible to decipher how debris is transported in basal, englacial and supraglacial positions, particularly if the relationships between ice structures (foliation, folding and thrusting) and debris are resolved. This paper explores these relationships for a variety of surge-type and non-surge-type glaciers, and offers new models for the transfer of debris in such glaciers. Cold or polythermal glaciers differ from temperate glaciers in generally having a much greater load of basally derived debris (Reference BoultonBoulton, 1970; Reference DowdeswellDowdeswell, 1986; Reference KnightKnight, 1997). However, it has also been suggested that the true contrast is greater between surge-type glaciers (greater basal debris content) and non-surge-type glaciers (Reference ClappertonClapperton, 1975), irrespective of their thermal regime. Contrasting views have emerged concerning the development of englacial debris-rich layers that appear to rise towards the glacier surface from the bed, as summarised by Boulton (1970, p. 720; Reference KnightKnight, 1997). Some authors (Reference WeertmanWeertman, 1961; Reference HookeHooke, 1973) have favoured passive movement of subglacially derived debris as the ice flowlines turn upwards towards the frontal margin, while others (Reference SwinzowSwinzow, 1962; Hambrey and Reference Hambrey and MüllerMüller, 1978) have suggested that thrusting and shearing are the processes which allow debris-rich basal ice, or subglacial debris, to rise to the surface along discrete surfaces or narrow zones of rapidly deforming ice. From studies in Svalbard, Norway, Reference BoultonBoulton (1970) made a convincing case for the incorporation of debris by thrusting, by identifying folds with truncated lower limbs. On Axel Heiberg Island, Canadian Arctic Archipelago, Hambrey and Reference Hambrey and MüllerMüller (1978) linked the development of debris-bearing thrust zones to pre-existing structures, especially crevasse traces that had become rotated from a vertical to a gentle, up-glacier-dipping attitude near the snout of White Glacier. In closely monitored Trapridge Glacier, Yukon Territory, Canada, Reference Clarke and BlakeClarke and Blake (1991) linked thrusting and recumbent folding with the transition from warm to cold ice at the bed. More recently, the association of debris-bearing thrusts with the movement of a surge front through a glacier has been described from Bakaninbreen in Svalbard (Reference Bennett, Hambrey, Huddart and GhienneHambrey and others, 1996; Murray and others 1997). Thrusting has also been documented in temperate glaciers, but only in surge-type glaciers does there appear to be significant incorporation of debris (e.g. Sharp and others 1994). In a review of debris entrainment processes, Reference Alley, Cuffey, Evenson, Strasser, Lawson and LarsonAlley and others (1997) conclude that incorporation of debris by thrusting and folding are valid mechanisms.
In contrast to studies of the basal debris load of Arctic glaciers, those concerned with supraglacial transport are few. However, observations on many glaciers by the authors suggest that debris derived from supraglacial sources carried on cold or polythermal glaciers is much less than on temperate glaciers. In all cases, supraglacial debris transport is generally concentrated in lateral or medial moraines. Other authors investigating medial moraine development in temperate glaciers have attempted to identify sources of debris in relation to the firn line and to flow-unit boundaries, and the effect these have on their morphology (e.g. Reference Eyles and RøgersonEyles and Rogerson, 1977; Reference Small, Clark and CawseSmall and others, 1979; Reference Vere and BennVere and Benn, 1989). However, the various models that have been proposed by these authors for temperate valley glaciers, which are based on convergence of discrete flow units, do not explain certain types of medial moraine in Svalbard.
This paper, therefore, examines the processes whereby ice deformation influences the incorporation and redistribution of debris within polythermal glaciers in Svalbard (Fig. 1). The sedimentary facies associated with the different de-formational processes are also characterised. The principal relationships between debris and structure that are explored are:
(i) rockfall debris associated with sedimentary stratification;
(ii) basally derived debris associated with longitudinal foliation; and
(iii) basally derived sediment forming arcuate debris layers, thought to be associated with thrusting.
Mechanisms related to the formation ?f the basal debris layer are also important (see reviews by Reference Hubbard and SharpHubbard and Sharp, 1989; Reference Souchez and LorrainSouchez and Lorrain, 1991; Reference KnightKnight, 1997), but are considered only superficially in this paper, as few suitable sites were available for study at the Svalbard glaciers. These mechanisms include regelation, flow through a vein system, bulk freezing-on, shearing and folding (Reference KnightKnight, 1997). The basal debris layer is generally thin in temperate glaciers, but can become thicker by folding, shearing and thrusting (Reference Sharp, Jouzel, Hubbard and LawsonSharp and others, 1994; Reference HartHart, 1995). As a framework for the following discussion, the known and inferred sources of debris and modes of incorporation aie summarised in Figure 2.
Understanding the processes of debris entrainment and modification during flow is critical to explaining landform assemblages in the proglacial areas of Arctic glaciers. This understanding takes on added importance because many Pleistocene landforms in Europe and North America are more similar to those observed at modern Arctic glacier margins than to those at alpine glaciers (Reference BoultonBoulton, 1967, Reference Boulton1972; Sollid and Reference Sollid and SørbelSørbel, 1988; Reference Hambrey and HuddartHambrey and Huddart, 1995; Reference Bennett and GlasserBennett and others, 1996b, in press; Reference Bennett, Hambrey, Huddart and GhienneHuddart and Hambrey, 1996; Reference Bennett, Hambrey and HuddartHambrey and others, 1997). Hence, investigations of this nature are also needed in order to examine the climatic implications of Quaternary glacial landform assemblages.
Modern Glaciers in Svalbard
Svalbard (approximately 77–80° N) (Fig. 1c) is an archipelago affected by a maritime–Arctic climate, and is 60% glacierized (Reference Hagen, Liestøl and RolandHagen and others, 1993). From observations of the thermal regime of a small number of glaciers, it is believed that extensive areas of temperate ice occur beneath the accumulation areas of the thicker glaciers, whereas the ice margins and snout areas are frozen to the bed (Hagen and Reference Hagen and SætrangSætrang, 1991; Reference Ødegård, Hamran, Bø, Etzelmüller, Vatne and SollidØdegård and others, 1992; Reference BjörnssonBjörnsson and others, 1996; Reference Jania, Mochnacki and GadekJania and others, 1996; Reference Nuttall, Hagen and DowdeswellNuttall and others, 1997). In such “polythermal” glaciers, the transition from sliding to freezing conditions at the bed has been used to explain why thrusting is an important process in the incorporation of debris into glacier ice (Reference Clarke and BlakeClarke and Blake, 1991; Reference Bennett, Hambrey, Huddart and GhienneHambrey and others, 1996), and leads to the development of proglacial thrust-moraine complexes of hummocky character (Reference Hambrey and HuddartHambrey and Huddart, 1995; Reference Bennett and GlasserBennett and others, 1996a, b; Reference Bennett, Hambrey, Huddart and GhienneHuddart and Hambrey, 1996; Reference Bennett, Hambrey and HuddartHambrey and others, 1997).
Many glaciers in Svalbard are of the surge type. Over 80 have been observed to surge (Reference Dowdeswell, Hamilton and HagenDowdeswell and others, 1991; Reference Hagen, Liestøl and RolandHagen and others, 1993). Studies of looped moraines and other surface features diagnostic of former surges suggest that about 35% of Svalbard ice masses may be of surge type (Reference Hamilton and DowdeswellHamilton and Dowdeswell, 1996).
Glaciers Investigated
Twelve glaciers, of both surge and non-surge type, were investigated along the west coast of Spitsbergen, Svalbard, between Kongsfjorden in the north and Hornsund in the south (Fig. 1). Surge-type glaciers are recognised in their quiescent state by their looped medial moraine patterns, crevasse-free nature and well-developed supraglacial stream networks with broad, open or sealed potholes (Reference Meier and PostMeier and Post, 1969; Reference Post and LaChapellePost and LaChapelle, 1971). The glaciers investigated range from small- to medium-sized valley glaciers several km long terminating on land, to large complex tidewater systems tens of km long. In all cases, multiple accumulation basins feed ice into relatively narrow tongues, while ice structures, particularly foliation, can be used to delineate the composite flow units. Those glaciers inferred to be non-surge type from surface structural and morphological evidence were Midre Lovénbreen, Austre Lovénbreen, Uvêrsbreen, Edithbreen and Steenbreen (Fig 1). However, it has been claimed that the first two are surge-type on the basis of the sleep frontal cliffs observed at the beginning of the century (Reference LiestølLiestøl, 1988), a feature that is common to all advancing polythermal and cold glaciers. Furthermore, the complex of “push moraines” at Uvêrsbreen has been inferred by Reference CrootCroot (1988) to indicate surge-type behaviour, a criterion which we believe to be unreliable (Reference Hambrey and HuddartHambrey and Huddart, 1995; Reference Bennett, Hambrey, Huddart and GhienneHuddart and Hambrey, 1996). Surge-type glaciers studied were Kongsvegen, Pedersenbreen, Bakaninbreen, Hessbreen and Finsterwalderbreen (Fig. 1). All these glaciers except the second (Reference Bennett and GlasserBennett and others, 1996b) have a known surge history, whilst Bakaninbreen was approaching the end of a sustained surge when the work was undertaken (Reference Dowdeswell, Hamilton and HagenDowdeswell and others, 1991). Additional observations were made on Austre Brøggerbreen, which is a thin glacier, almost completely frozen to its bed (Reference LiestølLiestøl, 1988), and Hansbreen in Hornsund, a tidewater glacier whose dynamic character is uncertain. Table 1 lists the principal characteristics of these glaciers. All of them are currently receding.
Methods
Ice structures, inferred to be longitudinal foliation and thrusts, in the snout areas of Midre Lovénbreen and Finsterwalderbreen were mapped from 1:15 000 (1991) and 1:30 000 (1995) vertical aerial photographs of the Norsk Polarinstitutt, Oslo, respectively, while their three-dimensional orientations were recorded on the ground. The dominant structures measured were longitudinal foliation and transverse arcuate layers (with debris in places), interpreted as thrusts. The orientations of smaller-scale structures, such as the axes of minor folds, not visible in the photographs, were also measured.
In order to characterise debris sources, the size, soiling, fabric and shape characteristics of debris associated with thrusts, folds and foliation were recorded and compared with material of known origin, such as scree, glaciofluvial sediment or basal till. Sorting was estimated visually. Fabric was recorded in two dimensions for material related to fold structures and plotted on rose diagrams. Data from thrusts are three-dimensional and are plotted on Schmidt equal-area Stereographic projections; both point-plots and contour-plots are given, and eigenvalues are calculated to illustrate the strength of the fabric. In each case 50 clasts were measured. To characterise shape, Krumbein roundness values were obtained from a visual roundness chart, while the lengths of the long (a) intermediate (b) and short (c) axes, were also recorded. Again, each dataset contained a population of 50 clasts. Clast-surface features such as facets and striations were also documented. The data were analyzed using the approach advocated by Reference Benn and BallantyneBenn and Ballantyne (1994) in which the RA index (percentage of angular and very angular clasts) is plotted against the C40 index (percentage of clasts with c/a ratios of 0.4), or as a covariant plot (Reference Bennett, Hambrey and HuddartBennett and others, 1997).
ICE Structures in Svalbard Glaciers
All the glaciers examined appear to have up to five recognisable types of planar structure, which have developed sequentially in the same manner. These are labelled S0–S4, in order of formation in a particular “parcel” of ice. The first structure is primary stratification, inherited from snowfalls in the accumulation area (S0). This is sometimes intersected by a set or sets of crevasse traces (S1), developed in the upper basin of the glacier, although this structure has not been delineated in all cases owing to the limited observations. The next structure is longitudinal foliation (S2), which occurs in all glaciers, and is evident down-glacier of the topographic constriction that is invariably present at the mouth of the upper basin. Multiple sets of crevasse traces (S3) intersect the foliation at various angles, and are best represented in the glacier tongue. Finally, arcuate fractures, sometimes with debris, and interpreted as thrusts (S4) occur towards the snout of the glacier, although, if they are not associated with debris, they are difficult to distinguish from S3. The relative importance of particular structures may depend on whether the glacier is surge-type or not, but the pattern is not yet clear, as a larger sample size is needed to assess this. The overall structural sequence has already been described for Hessbreen (Reference Bennett, Hambrey and HuddartHambrey and Dowdeswell, 1997) and Kongsvegen (Reference Glasser, Hambrey, Crawford, Bennett and HuddartGlasser and others, 1998), while thrusts have been described specifically from the surge front and down-glacier surface of Bakaninbreen (Reference Bennett, Hambrey, Huddart and GhienneHambrey and others, 1996). In view of the general similarities with the other glaciers, the emphasis here is placed on those structures that are associated with debris transport.
Debris associated with primary stratification
Character of stratification
Primary stratification is inherited from the accumulation of snow and superimposed ice in the accumulation area. It is observed most clearly in aerial photographs of glacier ablation zones, where it commonly forms a diffuse, wavy, broadly transverse pattern extending across the ice surface. On the glacier surface, stratification is defined by alternations of coarse bubbly ice and coarse clear ice, and in some areas by sheets of angular gravel. Dip is variable but generally low, reflecting open-style folding. In certain longitudinal zones the folding is much tighter with sleep limbs and fold axes normally dipping gently up-glacier. These more intensely folded zones coincide with flow-unit boundaries.
Fold styles as indicated by debris distribution
Some stratified horizons are associated with concentrations of mainly angular gravel, including numerous clasts of boulder size. The style and intensity of folding gives rise to the characteristic debris-distribution patterns observed at the glacier surface. These relationships are illustrated in two representative glaciers, Midre Lovénbreen, which shows no evidence of being surge-type (Fig. 3a), and the surge-type Finsterwalderbreen (Fig. 3b). Strongly folded ice typically has a “similar” style (i.e. attenuated limbs and thickened hinges). If the fold axes plunge gently up-glacier, as is normally the case, a debris layer emerges at one or more point sources, and becomes progressively more broadly spread across the ice surface as more of the folded layer is exposed by ablation (Fig. 4a).The normal up-glacier plunge may be altered to a transverse attitude where looped moraines have developed in surge-type glaciers (Fig. 4b). Differential melting often enables the detailed form of the folds to be established with confidence (Fig. 3b).
Less common is chevron-style folding, where the layers demonstrate a near-uniform thickness across the sharply defined fold hinges (Fig. 5). Chevron folds involving debris ablate differentially to give particularly clear fold crest-lines, which in detail show undulatory trends, and occasionally anastomose over distances of several metres (Fig. 4c). In ice with more open folds, the debris emerges beneath the ice surface in a uniform spread (Fig. 4d). Where measured, as on Finsterwalderbreen, fold axes appear to have a consistent orientation, regardless of their position and intensity of folding (Fig. 3b). In all cases the debris-rich layers are parallel to stratification and have sharp boundaries, indicating that they were probably incorporated into the stratification in a series of instantaneous rockfall events.
Debris-rich folded layers are analogous to folds in deformed rocks. From measurements at three sites, two-dimensional clast fabrics along the crests of folded debris layers demonstrate that the long axes have a preferred orientation parallel to the fold axes (Fig. 6a and b). In kinematic terms, this alignment is probably equivalent to stretching lineation in deformed rocks, and indicates that the maximum extending cumulative strain axis is parallel to the fold axis, whereas the maximum compression is normal to the axial plane. Further data of this type are needed to verify whether this is a universal relationship.
Surfare expression of folding
As tightly folded debris layers emerge, they develop into lineal ridges that widen and merge towards the snout. They may be described as medial moraines, but their origin is quite different from the usual models that are presented for these landforms (e.g. Eyles and Reference Eyles and RøgersonRøgerson, 1978; Reference Small, Clark and CawseSmall and others, 1979). The ridges typically extend from several metres to a few hundred metres across the ice surface (Fig. 3). If the fold axis undulates relative to the ice surface, the ridge may be discontinuous as the debris layer plunges in and out of the surface (Fig. 3b).
Individual folded debris layers commonly consist of a single lithology, but an adjacent layer may be of a different lithology. Thus, traverses across a series of fold-defined parallel ridges near the snouts of the several glaciers yielded multiple successions, with repetition of some beds, as one finds when mapping a strongly folded geological succession. For example, a traverse across a series of ridges of varying lithology, from west to east across the snout of Midre Lovénbreen, showed a variety of unilithology moraines, comprising schist, phyllite, amphibolitic gneiss, augen gneiss, and psammite and phyllite together. This pattern reflects different point sources in the headwalls prior to folding within the ice.
On Finsterwalderbreen, a similar pattern emerges, although because of the much more varied geology in the source areas, most ridges comprise distinct lithological associations, rather than single lithologies. This pattern is indicated by the encircled letters in Figure 3b. The inference that may be drawn from these observations is that single lithologies, or lithological associations, often represent the same stratum. Their repeated occurrence on transverse profiles is due to the intersection of the folded debris layers with the glacier surface in various positions, so defining the gross structure of the glacier.
Shape and sorting characteristics of debris
In order to assist in the definition of debris-transport paths through the glaciers, shape analysis was performed on the entrained debris (cf. Reference BoultonBoulton, 1978; Reference DowdeswellDowdeswell, 1986; Reference HambreyHambrey, 1994; Reference Bennett and GlasserBennett and Glasser, 1996). In the case of material associated with stratification, the seven samples collected showed strong clustering within the very angular and angular classes (group 2 data in Fig. 7a). This shape distribution compares closely with material collected from scree (group 1 data in Fig. 7a). Clear discrimination from other facies is achieved with an RA/C40 plot (Reference Benn and BallantyneBenn and Ballantyne, 1994; Reference Bennett, Hambrey and HuddartBennett and others, 1997), and highlights especially the high degree of angularity of the material.
The degree of sorting of material carried by ice is indicative of the extent of comminution during flow. Although, no systematic grain-size analyses were made on these samples, the bulk of the material is in the boulder, cobble and pebble categories, with minor amounts of coarse sand. Thus, samples associated with stratification are, in general, moderately well sorted, indicating little comminution or reduction in grain-size due to frost action.
Character of stratification in surge-type glaciers
Surge-type glaciers are characterised by looped moraines (e.g. Reference Meier and PostMeier and Post, 1969; Reference Post and LaChapellePost and LaChapelle, 1971; Reference Clarke and BlakeClarke, 1991; Reference Hubbard, Sharp and LawsonLawson, 1996), but the structural significance of these closed loops has rarely been studied. The structure of closed loops was investigated on Finsterwalderbreen, Hessbreen and Pedersenbreen, each of which shares common characteristics. Rather than debris-rich zones of valley-side material dipping vertically or steeply into the ice parallel to foliation as one might expect, the debris layers comprise material of angular character, representing the surface expression of folds with axes plunging gently up-glacier (Fig. 8a and b). The apices of the loops show a broad spread of debris, whereas the limbs, aligned parallel to the valley sides, show more constrained debris layers of moderate dip. Some loops (e.g. those on Hessbreen) show a series of such layers.
Related to loops, but indicating less deformation, are Z-or S-shaped folds, as on Finsterwalderbreen (Fig. 3b) and Pedersenbreen. These folded moraines reflect differential flow after surge ice from a tributary has entered the main body of the glacier and settled down into steady-state flow. The axial-plane foliation associated with these folds pervades the entire loop structure, and maintains an attitude parallel to the valley sides throughout. In some cases, loops may be rotated into a transverse attitude, especially if ice has to flow around a sharp curve, as on Bakaninbreen. This may result in the axes of folds and the associated foliation developing a transverse orientation.
Curious features associated with recently surged ice (as on Bakaninbreen) are fields of ice mounds a few metres high and of the order of 5–10 m in diameter. Internal stratification in these mounds sometimes shows a dome-like structure broadly parallel to the external morphology. In a few cases rings of debris may be associated with such mounds, when the core of the mound may have melted away through differential ablation, giving rise to a crater-like structure (Fig. 4e). Although they are difficult to explain, one possibility is that these structures are the product first of transverse compression which produces folded stratification with axes parallel to flow (as in steady-state flow), followed by longitudinal compression as the surge front passed through. In a geological sense, such ice-mound fields represent a dome-and-basin structure, the product of two phases of folding with stresses operating in two near-perpendicular orientations. Such features, however, would not survive many years of ablation following a surge, and the well-defined domes of debris eventually become irregular smears on the ice surface.
Debris associated with foliation
Longitudinal foliation is a ubiquitous structure of all the glaciers studied. In contrast to what happens in many alpine glaciers which have icefalls (e.g. Reference Allen, Kamb, Meier and SharpAllen and others, 1960; Reference HambreyHambrey and Milnes, 1977), longitudinal foliation is not overprinted by arcuate foliation, so generally can be traced from the equilibrium line almost to the snout. Following Allen and others’ (1960) definition of ice types, longitudinal foliation is typically composed of coarse bubbly, coarse clear and occasionally fine-grained ice (Fig. 9). It is generally most obvious near the ice margins and at flow-unit boundaries where the foliae are closely spaced, and may disappear completely in the middle of broad flow units, although this depends on: (i) the extent to which the ice is constricted as it leaves the upper basin; and (ii) whether large amounts of ice are transferred through the system without sufficient internal deformation, such as during a surge. Contrasting examples are non-surge-type White Glacier which has strong longitudinal foliation throughout most of its width (Hambrey and Reference Hambrey and MüllerMüller, 1978), and surge-type Hessbreen which has only localised foliation near the margins and at flow-unit boundaries (Reference Bennett, Hambrey and HuddartHambrey and Dowdeswell, 1997).
The orientation of foliation remains mainly within 15° of the vertical, except near the margins where the dip often decreases rapidly to approach that of the bed. Normally, this relationship is the result of “transposition” of older layering, and involves isoclinal folding with attenuation of limbs (Reference HambreyHambrey, 1977; Reference Hooke and HudlestonHooke and Hudleston, 1978). However, in the Svalbard glaciers, the foliation cross-cuts the more open folded layers in a similar manner to slaty cleavage in rocks folded in a more open style. Where the foliation is strongest, however, the stratification may be completely overprinted.
Debris is associated with foliation in a variety of ways: (i) disseminated unevenly through the ice in low concentrations (Fig. 10a); (ii) concentrated as thin (sub-centimetre) zones in fine foliated (heavily sheared) ice; (iii) as concentrated layers up to several cm wide in which the proportion of debris may exceed 50% by volume (Fig. 10b); (iv) as discontinuous pods up to several cm wide, slightly cross-cutting but trending sub-parallel to the foliation; (v) both disseminated and concentrated in layers in folded foliation sequences, where the foliation may be derived front stratification, but not demonstrably so (Fig. 10c). Of these, the discontinuous pods were only observed on Kongsvegen, and may be related to deformation of a gravel-filled channel that once trended parallel to the foliation (Reference Bennett and GlasserBennett and others, 1996a). Similar features have been described recently from glaciers in Iceland and New Zealand (Reference Kirkbride and SpeddingKirkbride and Spedding, 1996).
Unlike debris layers parallel to stratification, foliation-parallel debris comprises a wide range of shapes, with a predominance of subangular and subrounded clasts (group 5 data, Fig. 7), which resemble debris that was extracted from basal ice (group 4 data). In addition, depending on the lithology, many of the clasts show faceted and striated surfaces, especially limestones and mudstones. The sediment is poorly sorted, with a large proportion (30% or more) of mud, in addition to sand and gravel. Boulders are smaller than those concentrated in stratification, rarely exceeding 1 m in diameter.
Although most foliation-related debris of basal derivation is concentrated in marginal foliation, a number of examples of medial moraines containing such material have also been noted. A small ridge near the snout of Kongsvegen (Fig. 10b) runs parallel to foliation for at least 100 m, emerging from clean ice as a debris-bearing fold, with steep limbs and a fold axis gently plunging up-glacier. This ice is coarsegrained and clear, and had the appearance of regulation ice, for example the “stratified fades” of Knight (1997; fig. 8). Furthermore, the two-dimensional clast fabric shows a preferred orientation parallel to the foliation, although this is not as strong as for debris associated with folded stratification (Fig. 6c). A much larger ridge of basally derived debris, running parallel to foliation in the middle of a large medial moraine, is evident further up-glacier; this must have been uplifted at least 100 m from the bed. Near the snout of Hessbreen, a prominent septum of basal debris with a number of point sources is evident in the core of folds containing supraglacial debris.
Debris associated with arcuate transverse layers (thrusts)
Origin of arcuate debris layers
Fracturing in glacier ice is a common phenomenon, so that by the time the ice reaches the snout, numerous intersecting sets of crevasse traces are visible, presumably reflecting several generations of crevasse formation. Where glaciers have steep sides, some fracture-sets taper up from the basal ice layer in a convex down-glacier arc. These sets intersect the surface at a variety of angles: typically 20–40° for non-surge-type glaciers and up to 60–70° for surge-type glaciers (Reference Bennett, Hambrey, Huddart and GhienneHambrey and others, 1996). These same fractures may form gently curving arcs at the glacier surface, and some are associated with debris.
Such fractures have a variety of origins. Firstly, they could simply be rotated transverse crevasse traces (cf. Hambrey and Reference Hambrey and MüllerMüller, 1978), the debris having washed or lallen into open crevasses. Secondly, they may be basal crevasses into which debris has been squeezed (Reference SharpSharp, 1985) and then deformed by differentia] flow. Thirdly, they could be thrusts, as described by Reference Bennett, Hambrey, Huddart and GhienneHambrey and others (1996) and Reference Murray, Gooch and StuartMurray and others (1997).
Criteria for the recognition of thrusting
Thrusts may be recognised on the basis of the following criteria:
(i) evidence of discrete truncation of older structures (e.g. crevasse traces or stratification), with the up-glacier ice riding over down-glacier ice; this provides the best indication of thrusting;
(ii) zones of mylonitised ice (fine ice with microshears), associated with the fractures; these may be evident in recently active ice (e.g. in Bakaninbreen which surged recently; Reference Bennett, Hambrey, Huddart and GhienneHambrey and others, 1996);
(iii) clean fractures with narrow zones of debris-rich basal ice, or even slabs of frozen subglacially derived sediment, above;
(iv) sharply defined zones of coarse clear ice (a few cm to 0.5 m wide), which represent recrystallisation after thrust formation;
(v) direct measurements of displacements in active ice; the opportunities for these, however, are remote, as most fractures may no longer be active.
It is rare for all of these criteria to be fulfilled. However, if only one or two structures show these characteristics, and numerous other structures display a similar form and geometry, the implication is that they all have a common genesis. It is rare that one can “prove” that thrusting has taken place-in Svalbard glaciers, but the authors believe that the weight of evidence indicates that this is an important process, and that most of the arcuate debris layers are indeed thrusts.
Relationship between ice types and debris in thrusts
In detail, the thrusts or thrust zones recognised in the Svalbard glaciers studied are often structurally complex. At their simplest, they are represented by a clean fracture, sometimes with a thin smear of mud. Most common are zones of coarse clear ice several cm wide with sharply defined boundaries and a suture in the middle. This ice probably became recrystallised following cessation of movement. Next are zones of clear, strongly foliated ice several cm wide, with irregularly disseminated debris of mud to gravel size, which resembles regelation ice derived from the bed. Most striking are zones up to 0.5 m wide, composed of many sediment types, which have only limited interstitial ice. Zones of mylonitised ice are rare since active thrusting today is probably uncommon, except in glaciers that have recently undergone a surge, and such ice rapidly recrystallises.
Normally, on the surface of the glacier, debris is exposed in a narrow zone extending for several metres, but the fracture bearing the sediment may extend for 100 m or more (Fig. 11a). In vertical sections, where the entire depth of a thrust zone may be observed, as at Hessbreen, the sole thrust may be at the contact between the bed and the basal ice, but one or two additional bed-parallel displacements may also be identifiable in the regelation ice layer. Such displacement zones are very rich in debris, and it is from the uppermost of these that the main set of thrusts rises (Fig. 11b and c). By this means, typical basal ice facies (Reference Hubbard and SharpHubbard and Sharp, 1995; Hubbard and others 1996) may be uplifted to elevated positions within the ice mass (Fig. 11e and f), and may even be overturned. Once the debris reaches the surface, ablation concentrates the debris, which in turn retards ablation locally. Thus, prominent ridges form, the up-glacier lace commonly preserving the angle and rectilinear form of the thrust (Fig. 11d).
The distribution of debris in thrusts is highly irregular. Examples observed at Kongsvegen show thick sediment wedges at the base, thinning oui gradually or ending abruptly several metres above the base. Some thrusts have subsidiary thrusts; others bifurcate, both with and without debris. Some thrusts terminate abruptly before reaching the surface, and hence are termed “blind” (Reference Murray, Gooch and StuartMurray and others, 1997). The lack of obvious thrusts at the surface of many glaciers, except in the lowermost kilometre or so, may be because the thickness of the ice has a strong bearing on whether thrusts remain blind. Although some thrusts may be reactivated from older crevasse traces, as on White Glacier, Axel Heiberg Island (Hambrey and Reference Hambrey and MüllerMüller, 1978), most appear to be later, cross-cutting structures. However, subsidiary thrusts sometimes appear to take advantage of existing layering (e.g. stratification).
Although it is likely from the above evidence that thrusting is the dominant means whereby debris is lifted to a high englacial or supraglacial position, this process is not the only indication of deformation processes at the bed. Even before thrusting takes place, layers (such as regelation layering and stratification) are subjected to recumbent folding which, if taken to its ultimate limit, results in the shearing off of the lower limb of the fold and the initiation of a thrust (Fig. 12). The folding process itself thus provides a mechanism for uplifting debris, as has been described previously, but without thrusting, by Reference HudlestonHudleston (1976).
Sedimentology of thrust debris
Sedimentary facies associated with thrusting are much more variable than those derived from supraglacial sources. Diamicton has been noted on the surface of several glaciers (Fig. 13a), notably Bakaninbreen and Kongsvegen, both surge-type glaciers. The diamicton is massive or weakly stratified, and contains material from clay to boulder size of varied lithology, and the gravel clasts are commonly striated and faceted. Clast shapes range from very angular to rounded, with a predominance of mean values in the sub-angular and subrounded categories (Fig. 7). The discrimination with supraglacially derived debris is demonstrated by means of an RA/C40 plot (Fig. 7b). All these attributes indicate that this facies is derived from basal glacial debris or subglacial till. Diamicton does not form clearly defined ridges, because on contact with melting ice it flows readily, thus smearing the ice surface, commonly for some tens ?f metres.
Also common are sandy gravels and gravelly sands, in which the grain-size distribution is much narrower than for diamicton. Pebble- and cobble-sized material is normal, and in cleaned sections appears to be relatively structureless (Fig. 13b). Gravelly sand facies, however, sometimes preserve plane-bedding and cross-bedding, inherited from the source material and little modified despite being uplifted to the surface. Clast shapes resemble those in diamicton, confirming the findings in the proglacial area that glaciofluvial sediments and diamictons have similar clast-shape distributions (Fig. 7; cf. Reference Bennett, Hambrey and HuddartBennett and others, 1997).
Mud, sometimes with sand, commonly forms thin films on otherwise debris-free, thrust surfaces, but it is likely that at depth, diamicton is present and provides the source for the mud. On one glacier, Bakaninbreen, the bed is below sea level, and the mud is thus probably of glaciomarine origin.
The fabric of clasts associated with thrusts has been measured at several localities (Fig. 14). Compared with basal ice, which has a strong fabric parallel to flow (Fig. 14a), thrusts have weak girdle (Fig. 14b), or multi-maxima (Fig. 14c and d) fabrics. However, in the case of one low-angle thrust uplifting basal ice, the original fabric parallel to south–north flow is preserved, although it is weakened by the development of a transverse fabric (Fig. 14c). At none of the sites do the clast fabrics associated with the thrusts show any clear geometrical relationship with the thrusts. Perhaps the pre-thrusting fabrics are already variable, while the thrusting process itself can modify the fabric significantly or not at all.
Discussion
Debris entrainment and transport mechanisms
Several modes of debris entrainment and subsequent deformation have been identified in poly thermal glaciers in Svalbard: regelation and shearing in basal ice; folding of stratification; incorporation of basal debris in fold-generated foliation; deposition in foliation-parallel supraglacial and englacial streams followed by deformation; and thrusting. Of these, the regelation mechanism has not yet been studied in any detail in Svalbard glaciers. However, it is known from other glaciers in the Arctic that several metres of regelation ice may build up (e.g. Reference Gemmell, Sharp and SugdenGemmell and others, 1986), while in alpine glaciers as many as seven different basal ice facies have been identified (Reference Hubbard and SharpHubbard and Sharp, 1995; Reference Hubbard, Sharp and LawsonHubbard and others, 1996).
The supply of rockfall debris, its subsequent transport in a high-level position, and its role in the development of medial moraines on valley glaciers has received much attention, especially in Alpine regions (e.g. Reference BoultonBoulton, 1978; Reference Eyles and RøgersonEyles and Rogerson, 1978; Reference Boulton and EylesBoulton and Eyles, 1979; Reference Small, Clark and CawseSmall and others, 1979). However, the role played by large-scale folding within glaciers in the production of medial moraine systems does not appear to have been widely recognised. Large-scale folding may be associated with glaciers of a particular morphology, that is those containing multiple accumulation basins, feeding into a narrow tongue with no icefall. Glaciers of this morphology represent the normal type of self-contained valley glacier in Svalbard today. In order to explain the relationships between the distribution and form of debris layers, and the primary folded stratification, a conceptual model (Fig. 15) has been developed. This shows in plan view and cross-section how debris which falls into tin-upper accumulation basins is transported along converging flowlines (profile AA′). This results in folding of the stratification, especially where transverse compression is strong at the narrowing of the glacier channel (profile BB′). This folding is not of uniform intensity, but is characterised by zones of tight and isoclinal folding. It is the emergence from an englacial position of tightly folded debris-bearing limbs. trending parallel to ice flow, that produces medial moraines (profile CC′).
In the cores of some tightly folded /ones, in which a strong axial-planar longitudinal foliation is developed, debris of subglacial origin is present, especially in the lower 1 km or so of the glacier. Although some authors have argued that basal glacial debris can be incorporated into an englacial position under conditions of diverging ice flow which results in a type of helicoidal flow within the ice body (Reference Shaw, R. P. and CresswellShaw, 1975; Reference AarioAario, 1977), these ideas are contrary to our understanding of basal ice mechanics (Reference MenziesMenzies, 1995). Perhaps more realistic is the model developed by Reference Eyles and RøgersonEyles and Rogerson (1977) for temperate Berendon Glacier, British Columbia, Canada, which involves injection of basal marginal debris in deep crevasses, and redistribution by shearing at the zone of convergence between two glaciers, However, in the Svalbard glaciers studied we have evidence for a different mechanism. This involves folding with axes parallel to flow deep within the glacier, in the same way that the material transported at a high level is also folded. In other words, the basal debris forms simply the lower pan of the fold sequence, but where the folding is most intense, this basal debris can reach the surface (Fig. 16). This basal debris may be contained in regelation ice, or it may represent deformable till. In any case, to explain the fold geometry, which in relation to the bedrock must have a disharmonie relationship, deformable material at the bed needs to be envisaged to act, possibly in association with sliding on bedrock, as the plane of décollement, at the ice/bedrock interface. In a typical polythermal glacier, the décollement is unlikely to occur near the snout as the ice is frozen to the bed. Instead, it is inferred that the structure formed in the main zone of convergence, before being transferred relatively passively through the narrow tongue. It is accepted that, although this model seems to best fit the structural and sedimentological evidence, it needs to be tested. This would best be achieved by means of detailed structural mapping, the application of ground-penetrating radar techniques, as demonstrated on Bakaninbreen (Reference Murray, Gooch and StuartMurray and others, 1997), combined with borehole studies of the glacier interior and the bed.
The role of thrusting in the incorporation of debris has now been demonstrated using structural and sedimentological evidence in several Svalbard glaciers (e.g. Reference BoultonBoulton, 1970; Reference Bennett and GlasserBennett and others, 1996b; Reference Bennett, Hambrey, Huddart and GhienneHambrey and others, 1996; Reference Bennett, Hambrey and HuddartHambrey and Dowdeswell, 1997; Reference Murray, Gooch and StuartMurray and others, 1997; Reference Glasser, Hambrey, Crawford, Bennett and HuddartGlasser and others, 1998). Furthermore, the process has actually been observed to take place during a surge of a temperate glacier (Reference Sharp, Lawson and AndersonSharp and others, 1988).
Characteristically, except for isolated examples, thrusts mainly begin to appear at the ice surface within 1 km of the snout (Fig. 17). However, observations along sleep glacier flanks suggest that the reason so few reach the surface higher up is because they are “blind” in ice more than several tens of metres thick, i.e. the thrusts only propagate through the lower part of the ice mass. Most thrusts are not associated with significant volumes of debris, and most of those that do have debris ridges extending laterally for only several metres (Fig. 17). Exceptionally, however, individual debris ridges extending for 2 km have been noted, as on Uvêrsbreen (Reference Hambrey and HuddartHambrey and Huddart, 1995). These observations suggest that debris incorporation is non-uniform. Possibly, meltwater locally facilitates enhanced displacements along thrusts, enabling debris to be uplifted preferentially in such positions. Certainly, on rare occasions, evidence for sub-glacial water discharge along short lengths of thrusts has been documented, as on Bakaninbreen (Reference Bennett, Hambrey, Huddart and GhienneHambrey and others, 1996). Alternatively, concentrations of debris may occur where two thrusts intersect, as discussed by Bennett and others (in press).
In order for thrusts to develop, sliding displacements are necessary within the ice. Water is an ideal medium for lubricating thrusts: hence, their initiation is most likely to occur in temperate ice. In many cases, thrusts appear to be initiated in regelation ice, and a sole thrust may develop parallel to the regelation layering, but then rise upwards in a convex down-glacier are (Fig. 11b). As suggested by Reference Clarke and BlakeClarke and Blake (1991) and Reference Hambrey and HuddartHambrey and Huddart (1995), thrust initiation may take place preferentially where sliding ice meets ice that is frozen to the bed. Similarly, propagation upwards probably normally requires temperate ice, so if the upper part of the ice mass is cold, the thrust may terminate before breaking the surface, and would therefore be blind. Thrusts may also propagate upwards from bedrock irregularities, especially where ice is flowing over a rock step. Here, a décollement surface extends from the top of the step, which allows the upstream ice to flow much faster than ice in the Ice of the step. This mechanism is evident in cliffs at the margin of Hessbreen, where the basal zone could be observed.
In many Svalbard glaciers today, thrusts occur in ice which is probably cold. Therefore it is unlikely that they formed where they are now visible. Either they formed much higher up-glarier, where temperate ice is present at the bed, or formed when the thermal regime was different, such as during the Neoglacial maximum when the glaciers were much thicker. Evidence that the ice is structurally inactive in at least one of the glaciers studied (Midre Lovénbreen) comes from the coarsely crystalline nature of ice adjacent to a thrust with strong preferred optic axis orientation bearing no relation to the orientation of the thrust (Fig. 18). This ice probably gained its present fabric in the low-stress conditions that characterise the ice front today.
Comparison of debris transfer mechanisms in surge-type and non-surge-type glaciers
All of the debris-entrainment mechanisms, described above, apply to both surge-type and normal glaciers in Svalbard. Thrusting of basally derived debris towards the glacier surface is a feature of both types of glacier, although in normal glaciers the surface expression of this process is limited mainly to within a few hundred metres of the snout, whereas in surge-type glaciers, thrusting may be evident much further up-glacier. Il is thus likely that the greater propensity for thrusting in surge-type glaciers is responsible for their assimilating a larger amount of basal debris than normal glaciers, although this is not reflected in the distribution of debris at the surface.
There are some subtle differences in the manner in which supraglacially derived debris is transported. In surge-type glaciers, the folding is relatively gentle and may lark an axial plant foliation. Surface moraines are commonly in the form of loops, reflecting folding of supraglacially derived debris layers, accompanied by rotation of fold axes. In normal glaciers, folding also occurs, but may be tighter, and the resulting supraglacial moraines are linear. These characteristics may be transmitted to the proglacial area during deposition; for example, a former moraine loop of surge-type Pedersenbreen can be mapped out as a curving train of angular debris in the proglacial area.
Basally derived debris associated with longitudinal foliation seems equally prevalent in both types of glacier. It generally is best developed near the margins, but occasionally forms longitudinal septa in mid-glacier; however, these features were only observed in two surge-type glaciers (Hessbreen and Kongsvegen).
Conclusions
Analysis of the distribution and character of debris transported in several polythermal valley glaciers in Svalbard demonstrates the importance of ice-tectonic processes that have been unrecognised or underestimated previously:
(1) The development of medial moraines is related to the incorporation of rockfall debris into the firn and ice within broad accumulation basins, followed by folding in response to lateral compression as thé ice moves into a narrower tongue.
(2) It is suggested that the effect of the same phase of folding at the base of the ice mass results in the high-level incorporation of glacial debris of basal character from a bed of deforming till, to form longitudinal ridges ai the glacier surface (Fig. 16).
(3) Incorporation of debris-rich basal ice and a variety of subglacial sedimentary facies by thrusting commonly results in large masses of debris which are transported towards the surface of the glacier, and deposited to form transverse ridges (Fig. 17). The initiation of thrusting is facilitated by (i) the transition from basal sliding to frozen-bed conditions near the terminus, (ii) the presence of bedrock steps, and (iii), in a surging glacier, the passage of the surge front through the system.
A number of implications arise from this work. Firstly, the distribution of fold-related ridges composed of rockfall debris has the potential, when combined with mapping of the source areas, of not only tracing particle paths through the glacier, but also defining the large-scale structure of the lower part of the glacier. Work of this nature would be enhanced substantially by the application of techniques to determine distribution oi debris at depth in the glacier, such as ground-penetrating radar. Secondly, understanding the distribution of debris within the glacier system in the context of ice-structural evolution allows the development of improved models for the explanation of certain glacial depositional landforms, For example, flow-parallel linear ridges of angular debris are the proglacial continuations of medial moraines that were formed by strong folding of layers of rockfall-derived debris; white deposition from en-glacial debris-bearing thrusts leads to the development of at least one form of “hummocky moraine”.
Acknowledgements
Financial support for this study was provided by Liverpool John Moores University, The University of Greenwich, the European Union Environment and Climate Programme (grant No. EN5V-CT93-0299) and the U.K. Natural Environment Research Council (grant No. GR9/02185). We thank N. Cox, Base Managerat the NERC Arctic Research Station and A.-M. Nuttall (University of Wales, Aberystwyth) for logistical organisation, and S. Ripper (Landscapes Graphics) for drafting most of the diagrams. The comments of J. C. Strasser and two anonymous referees have helped improve this paper.