Oriented lake-and-ridge assemblages of the Arctic coastal plains: glacial landforms modified by thermokarst and solifluction
- 1 April 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Polar Record
- Vol. 35 (194), 215-230
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0032247400015503
Abstract
Oriented assemblages of parallel ridges and elongated lakes are widespread on the coastal lowlands of northeast Eurasia and Arctic North America, in particular, in Alaska, Arctic Canada, and northeast Siberia. So far, only the oriented lakes have been of much scientific interest. They are believed to be formed by thermokarst in perennially frozen ice-rich sediments, while their orientation is accounted for either by impact of modern winds blowing at right angles to long axes of the lakes (when it concerns individual lakes), or by the influence of underlying bedrock structures (in the case of longitudinal and transverse alignment of lake clusters).En masseexamination of space images suggests that oriented lake-and-ridge assemblages, not the oriented lakes alone, occur in the Arctic. Hence any theory about their formation should account for the origin and orientation of the assemblages as a whole. The existing hypotheses appear inadequate for this end, so this paper proposes that the assemblages were initially created by glacial activity, that is, by ice sheets that drumlinized and tectonized their beds, as well as by sub- and proglacial meltwater, and then they were modified by thermokarst, solifluction, and aeolian processes. This assumption opens up an avenue by which all known features of oriented landforms in the Arctic can be explained. The paper suggests that the oriented landforms in Siberia and Alaska are largely signatures of a marine Arctic ice sheet that transgressed from the north, while the Baffin Island and Mackenzie Delta forms were created by the respective sectors of the Laurentide ice sheet. The oriented features discussed belong to the last Late Glacial through the Early Holocene.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Oriented lakesPublished by Springer Nature ,2006
- On the nature and origin of "muck" deposits in the Klondike area, Yukon TerritoryCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1997
- THERMOKARST LAKESCanadian Geographies / Géographies canadiennes, 1992
- Late-Pleistocene Eolian Sand Sheets in AlaskaQuaternary Research, 1990
- Quaternary sedimentation of the Alaskan Beaufort shelf: Influence of regional tectonics, fluctuating sea levels, and glacial sediment sourcesTectonophysics, 1985
- The Oriented Lakes of Arctic AlaskaThe Journal of Geology, 1962
- Hydrodynamics in Three Arctic LakesThe Journal of Geology, 1960
- On the orientation of lake basins [Alaska]American Journal of Science, 1954
- Oriented Lakes of Northern AlaskaThe Journal of Geology, 1949
- The Northern Alaskan Coastal Plain Interpreted from Aerial PhotographsGeographical Review, 1947