Perennial frost mounds developed across northern Europe following retreat of the late
Quaternary ice sheets (c. 23–19). Their relict forms comprise depressions with surrounding
ramparts (periglacial ramparted depressions - PRDs). Although PRD surface geometry is
well-documented, their origin is less well-understood. There is little agreement on: i)
definitive identification of PRDs, ii) PRD formation processes, and iii) the relationship
between different frost-mound types (i.e. pingo, palsa and lithalsa).
For the first time, this research characterises the internal structure of a relict lithalsa in the
Ardennes (Belgium-German border), at macro- (e.g. coring, logging) and micro-scales (thin
sections) and contextualises this with observations on the hydrological, lithological and
topographic setting. Micromorphology enables the study of sedimentary environments and
processes of formation. This investigation identifies diagnostic suites of microstructures
indicative of frost action, landform development and environmental setting. The results are
then applied to suspected PRDs in Norfolk (Walton Common) and Wales (the Cledlyn
Valley), for which a likely frost-mound origin is confirmed. This approach: i) identifies the
internal structure of PRDs, ii) considers the potential for change in deformation with depth
and lateral extent within the rampart, and iii) considers the differences and similarities in
micro-textures and structures in a variety of grain sizes across the sites where PRDs occur.
Key microstructures identified, indicative of cryogenic origins, include: i) a vertical to subvertical
microfabric (e.g. frost-jacked grains), ii) platy-prismatic, sub-angular aggregates, iii)
planar deformation (e.g. fragmented domains, frost-cracked grains), and iv) evidence of
pore-water movement on thawing of ice and associated grain translocation (e.g. silt and clay
cappings). Microstructures attributed to PRD development include: i) a sub-vertical
microfabric of similarly inclined elongate grains, associated with tilted strata, ii)
microstructures linked to mass-wasting during frost-mound growth or rampart formation
(e.g. grain concentrations, grain coatings of silt and clay, curvilinear grain arrangements,
skelsepic plasmic fabric), iii) planar structures (e.g. grain lineations, linear concentrations of
grains and fragmented domains and fractured grains, that may reflect shear strain during
rampart-formation processes), and vi) multiple domains, interpreted as re-homogenisation
of sediment caused by frost-mound heave, and subsequent rampart-formation processes.
Consequently, this research identifies and characterises PRDs, which: i. provides a better understanding of the genesis of PRDs, for the classification of
different types of ice-cored hills,
ii. informs palaeoenvironmental reconstruction, since ice-cored hills are diagnostic
of former permafrost (frozen ground conditions),
iii. informs civil engineering projects where sediments are disturbed by PRD
development (e.g. heave and subsidence).
Date of Award | 2017 |
---|
Original language | English |
---|
Awarding Institution | |
---|
Assessing the genesis of periglacial ramparted depressions through a macroscopic and microscopic analysis of their internal structures
Bromfield, S. S. (Author). 2017
Student thesis: Doctoral Thesis