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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Terra nova 15 (2003), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-3121
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: We present a new survey of several Palaeozoic sections in both the Taurus range and the Border Folds that documents typical glacial features including a glacial pavement and striated dropstones (Halevikdere Formation) and demonstrates the former presence of an ice sheet in southern and south-eastern Turkey. Evidence for the late Ashgill (Hirnantian) age of this episode is provided by macro- and microfossils found within the glacial formation. The extension of ice-related deposits into the northernmost part of the Arabian Platform (Mardin region) implies a much wider distribution of the Ordovician ice sheet than was previously believed, and strongly suggests that southern Turkey lay close to Egypt during the Lower Palaeozoic.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
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    In:  Geological Society Special Publication 368: 275-292.
    Publication Date: 2012-12-11
    Description: The Upper Ordovician glacial record of southern Jordan (Ammar Fm.) essentially consists of palaeovalley infills and of a subordinate time-transgressive fluvial to shallow-marine succession overstepping both the palaeovalleys and interfluvial areas. Valley size (depth, 60–160 m; width, 1–3 km), steep (20–50°) margins, internal organization and depositional facies point to an origin as tunnel valleys. The tunnel valleys are infilled by either fluvioglacial sandstones or fluviodeltaic coarsening-upward successions including fine-grained clayey sediments. Re-occupation of previous valleys is evident in places. At least three generations of tunnel valleys are inferred from cross-cutting relationships, although they most probably only reflect temporary standstills and minor re-advances related to the overall recession following the main glacial advance recorded in Saudi Arabia. Petrophysical measurements indicate that higher permeabilities are located in the glacially related strata (1.5–3 darcy in fluvioglacial infills), with a somewhat reduced porosity (22–28%) relative to the preglacial sandstones owing to a higher clay content, probably of diagenetic origin. Sandstone amalgamation, however, gives the fluvioglacial sandstones a high reservoir quality.
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2012-12-11
    Description: The architecture, distribution and development of channelized sandstone bodies are described from Late Ordovician paraglacial successions of the Tassili N'Ajjer (SE Algeria and SW Libya) based on satellite images and field data (sedimentary logs, photomosaics). Sandstone bodies have a ribbon-like form at outcrop (often referred to as ‘cordons’ in the literature). They typify a fluvioglacial outwash plain deposited between a continental ice front and a marine delta-front zone. Channelized sandstone bodies are straight to sinuous, with widths (W) in the 60–600 m range, thicknesses (T) in the 5–30 m range and they have a mean W/T ratio of 16.5. They develop within an aggradational–progradational sand-dominated deltaic topset succession including at its distal end a terminal distributary channel and mouth-bar environments. The architecture of channel bodies and the related depositional facies, which includes climbing-dune cross-stratification, indicates that channelized sandstone bodies represent plugs of isolated channels related to high-magnitude flood events (glacier outbursts). These plugs form fossilized networks of both braided channels and interlaced anastomosed channels, offering snapshots of an outburst-related unconfined proglacial outwash braidplain constituted by the amalgamation of adjacent, elongated outwash fans.
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2007-10-08
    Description: Upper Cretaceous-Palaeocene alluvial-fan conglomerates exposed along the northern margin of the Arc Basin (Provence, SE France) preserve a continuum between undeformed basinal deposits and syntectonic alluvial-fan deposits. Based on the distribution of facies associations and growth structures in the alluvial-fan deposits, and using marker levels and erosional surfaces, the tectono-sedimentary evolution of the basin margin is discussed. On a long timescale, the stratigraphic pattern in the alluvial-fan deposits mainly records the tectonic activity in the catchment, and subordinate out-of-syncline thrusts in the basin margin. On an intermediate timescale, evolution in the drainage area controls the spatial evolution of the alluvial fans and some minor changes in depositional facies. High-frequency cycles record aggradation-stabilization sequences, resulting in vertically superimposed alluvial-fan bodies more probably tectonically controlled, whereas alternation between conglomerates-siltstones at the scale of interbedding most probably reflects climatic cycles.
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2015-08-26
    Description: Lakes are major depositional systems for which the related depositional processes have long been considered relatively simple. Breaking this statement, this study presents a detailed analysis of deposits in Lake Saint-Jean, the third largest natural lake in Québec. In addition to postglacial deltaic and coastal depositional systems fringing the lake, current-controlled features such as a large subaqueous prograding wedge and three sediment drifts have been identified in its central portion based on two-dimensional (2-D) acoustic high-resolution subbottom profiles. The large subaqueous prograding wedge is a 4-km-long and up to 15-m-thick heterolithic shelf-like construction in the southeastern part of the lake. The three sediment drifts are 0.1–0.5-km-long and 2–5-m-thick mud mounds distributed on the lake floor in the central portion of the lake. Diatom analyses and radiocarbon dating show that the development of these current-controlled features occurred during the lacustrine phase, after the disconnection with the postglacial marine Laflamme Gulf at 8.5 cal. k.y. B.P. Depositional facies show evidence of recurrent bottom-current activity. Related deposits alternate with pelagic sedimentation stages characterized by the settling of mud and biogenic accumulations. We investigated the origin of bottom currents using a numerical simulation (SYMPHONIE, an oceanographic model), with the aim of modeling wind-induced lake-scale water circulation. Simulations suggest that the subaqueous prograding wedge and the three sediment drifts result from wind-induced bottom currents generated by storm events having wind speed greater than 10 m s –1 . Such strong winds are able to significantly affect sedimentation in the central portion of Lake Saint-Jean. The resulting wind-induced sedimentary features were integrated into a refined lacustrine depositional model that summarizes the evolution of a group of water bodies referred to as "wind-driven water bodies." This study applies a new tool for lake strata characterization and highlights the potential difficulty in differentiating them from marine deposits in the geological record.
    Print ISSN: 0016-7606
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-2674
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2013-02-09
    Description: A bstract : More than a hundred circular structures are observed at the topmost part of the Late Ordovician glaciogenic record in the central Anti-Atlas, southern Morocco. The structures were formed in the outer glaciated platform and characterize the Hirnantian deglaciation sequence. They are distributed within a 20 meter thick stratal interval and, at present, relicts of them still occupy several square kilometers in map view. The circular to ovoidal structures, which comprise fluvial sandstone beds and are sealed by shallow marine strata, occur in closely spaced clusters. They are 13–320 m in diameter, with half of them in the 40–90 m range. Stratal wedging and bending, as well as extensional and reverse centimeter- to meter-scale soft-sediment fractures, demonstrate that formation processes initially involved synsedimentary uplifts. Subsequent subsidence and collapse resulted in the formation of circular structures, which essentially correspond to localized depocenters in the form of small-scale sag basins. Regarding the overall deglaciation context, the circular structures are interpreted as periglacial in origin, with vertical movements ascribed to cryogenic processes involving the growth and then decay of bodies of segregation ice. The size and diameter distributions, which are comparable to the recent (Younger Dryas) and current lithalsa structures, suggest that Hirnantian circular features relate to similar genetic processes and can be referred to as lithalsa-like structures. A conceptual emplacement model is proposed, which considers that a long-term sedimentary aggradation over the fluvial plain prevented any significant landforms (either a bump or a depression) from being expressed at the depositional surface at the time of the circular structure formation. The Hirnantian lithalsa-like structures constitute firm evidence for a Late Ordovician discontinuous permafrost during the deglaciation stage. Assuming that the late Quaternary meridional zonation is valid, it suggests the Anti-Atlas was at latitudes in the 55–65° interval. If combined with the rare pingo structures described in the literature, which attest that coeval continuous permafrost conditions occurred at higher paleo-latitudes, the Moroccan circular structures provide evidence for an alternate South Pole position during the Hirnantian (444 Ma).
    Print ISSN: 1527-1404
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2016-03-02
    Description: :  Backstepping cross-strata on steep foresets of a Gilbert-type proglacial fluviodeltaic system are ascribed to cyclic steps and other associated supercritical bedforms. They provide insight into how sandur river flows transition into the marine realm. These sedimentary structures are located on steep foresets (up to 17°) with corresponding top-lying, flat-based topsets in an upper Pleistocene delta on the North Shore of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, Québec, Canada. Packages of backstepping cross strata of sand and gravel, lying in the lower part of the delta front outcrop, are organized in 10–20 m spaced pseudo-foresets with a mean slope of 11–12° seawards. Backstepping strata include frequent internal erosion surfaces that onlap upslope on pseudo-foresets and are interpreted as cyclic steps. Narrow, deep, and asymmetrical scours and upslope-climbing cross beds are interpreted as chutes-and-pools and antidunes respectively. Very shallow (〈 15 m) depositional paleo-bathymetry is inferred from the preservation of the delta brink. The well-organized stratal pattern in cyclic step to antidune deposits indicates relatively steady and uniform flow patterns. There is insufficient distance for a headscarp large enough to transform to the volume of observed accreted sands or for a flow transformation from a gravitational collapse to net-depositional cyclic steps. These deposits are sandier than the topsets beds and are thus not derived from them, but rather correspond to topset erosional surfaces. The development of cyclic steps from hyperpycnal flows was likely enhanced by tidal drawdown processes. The resulting sediment-laden supercritical flows plunged inertially and evolved into an underflow that generated the cyclic steps on the upper foresets. The cyclic steps have a high aspect ratio and represent an end member of coarse-grained sediment deposited on steep slopes, in contrast to low-gradient, low-aspect-ratio muddy deposits.
    Print ISSN: 1527-1404
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2018
    Description: 〈p〉Swath bathymetry data and seismic profiles collected in the NW Gulf of St Lawrence reveal a series of wedge-shaped depositional systems interpreted as grounding zone wedges (GZWs). Some segments of the GZWs change locally to form frontal moraines, or morainal banks, and subaqueous ice-contact fans, reflecting changes in either the nature of the ice margin or the rate of sediment input. These grounding zones (GZ) of the ice margin extend laterally along three isobaths at depths of 180 (GZ1), 120 (GZ2) and 80 (GZ3) m (±20 m) along the Québec North Shore shelf, the 120 m-deep GZ2 system being traceable over a distance of 〉300 km. Associated GZWs can occur in three geometries along a same isobath system: curvilinear, lobate and shelf-break. GZ systems were built during three distinct stages of stabilization of the marine-based southeastern margin of the Laurentide Ice Sheet following its rapid retreat across the deeper waters of the Laurentian Channel in the Gulf of St Lawrence after 14.8 cal ka BP. The occurrence of GZ along distinct isobaths indicates that bathymetry exerted a strong control on ice stabilization during deglaciation by reducing the relative water depth at the ice margin and thereby the buoyancy and rate of iceberg calving. However, fluctuations and re-advances of the ice margin are also recorded by the overprinting of a portion of the GZ2 system by the younger GZ3 system, potentially suggesting an additional response to climate-driven forcing.〈/p〉
    Print ISSN: 0375-6440
    Electronic ISSN: 2041-4927
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2018
    Description: 〈p〉Deglacial sedimentary sequences recording the decay and final demise of ice sheets result from intricate interactions between the pattern of ice margin retreat, inherited basin physiography and relative sea-level (RSL) changes. A specific emphasis is here given to the glacio-isostatic adjustment (GIA), which may force postglacial local RSL fall in spite of concomitant glacio-eustatic rise. In this contribution, we characterize a Quaternary deglacial succession emplaced in such a setting, subsequently used as an analogue to interpret an end-Ordovician deglacial record. The Quaternary deglacial succession, tens of metres thick, formed under condition of RSL fall forced by the GIA in 〈i〉c.〈/i〉 10 000 years in the aftermath of the deglaciation. This sedimentary succession consists of a lower, fining-upward sequence representing the backstepping of ice-contact depocentres following the retreat of the ice margin, and an upper, coarsening-upward sequence that relates to the subsequent progradation of a glaciofluvial delta system. A very similar stratigraphic stacking pattern characterizes the Ordovician analogue, suggesting a comparable deglacial sequence. By analogy with the Quaternary succession, this ancient deglacial record would have hence been emplaced under conditions of RSL fall forced by the GIA. Moreover, it must only represent a very short time interval that could be viewed as virtually instantaneous regarding the Late Ordovician glaciation. Such a vision is at odds with commonly accepted interpretations for such successions.〈/p〉
    Print ISSN: 0375-6440
    Electronic ISSN: 2041-4927
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2018-05-15
    Description: Deglacial sedimentary sequences recording the decay and final demise of ice sheets result from intricate interactions between the pattern of ice margin retreat, inherited basin physiography and relative sea-level (RSL) changes. A specific emphasis is here given to the glacio-isostatic adjustment (GIA), which may force postglacial local RSL fall in spite of concomitant glacio-eustatic rise. In this contribution, we characterize a Quaternary deglacial succession emplaced in such a setting, subsequently used as an analogue to interpret an end-Ordovician deglacial record. The Quaternary deglacial succession, tens of metres thick, formed under condition of RSL fall forced by the GIA in c. 10 000 years in the aftermath of the deglaciation. This sedimentary succession consists of a lower, fining-upward sequence representing the backstepping of ice-contact depocentres following the retreat of the ice margin, and an upper, coarsening-upward sequence that relates to the subsequent progradation of a glaciofluvial delta system. A very similar stratigraphic stacking pattern characterizes the Ordovician analogue, suggesting a comparable deglacial sequence. By analogy with the Quaternary succession, this ancient deglacial record would have hence been emplaced under conditions of RSL fall forced by the GIA. Moreover, it must only represent a very short time interval that could be viewed as virtually instantaneous regarding the Late Ordovician glaciation. Such a vision is at odds with commonly accepted interpretations for such successions.
    Print ISSN: 0305-8719
    Electronic ISSN: 2041-4927
    Topics: Geosciences
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