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Guyard, Hervé, Francus, Pierre, St-Onge, Guillaume, Hausmann, Sonja, Pienitz, Reinhard (2014) Microfacies and microstructures of subglacial and deglacial sediments from the Pingualuit Crater Lake (Ungava Peninsula, Canada) Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 51 (12) 1084-1096 doi:10.1139/cjes-2014-0041

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Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitleMicrofacies and microstructures of subglacial and deglacial sediments from the Pingualuit Crater Lake (Ungava Peninsula, Canada)
JournalCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences
AuthorsGuyard, HervéAuthor
Francus, PierreAuthor
St-Onge, GuillaumeAuthor
Hausmann, SonjaAuthor
Pienitz, ReinhardAuthor
Year2014 (December)Volume51
Issue12
PublisherCanadian Science Publishing
DOIdoi:10.1139/cjes-2014-0041Search in ResearchGate
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Mindat Ref. ID485000Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:485000:1
GUID0
Full ReferenceGuyard, Hervé, Francus, Pierre, St-Onge, Guillaume, Hausmann, Sonja, Pienitz, Reinhard (2014) Microfacies and microstructures of subglacial and deglacial sediments from the Pingualuit Crater Lake (Ungava Peninsula, Canada) Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 51 (12) 1084-1096 doi:10.1139/cjes-2014-0041
Plain TextGuyard, Hervé, Francus, Pierre, St-Onge, Guillaume, Hausmann, Sonja, Pienitz, Reinhard (2014) Microfacies and microstructures of subglacial and deglacial sediments from the Pingualuit Crater Lake (Ungava Peninsula, Canada) Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 51 (12) 1084-1096 doi:10.1139/cjes-2014-0041
In(2014, December) Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences Vol. 51 (12) Canadian Science Publishing
Abstract/Notes The Pingualuit Crater (Ungava Peninsula, Canada) hosts a freshwater basin in which a subglacial lake subsisted under the Laurentide Ice Sheet during the last glacial period. Microfacies and microstructures of a 9 m long sediment core are presented to discuss the depositional environment of deformed glacigenic and postglacial sequences deposited in the deep basin of the lake. Five distinct lithofacies are characterized. The range of glacial microstructures observed in the lower facies (Facies IV) reveals that high stress level occurred outside the crater during the formation of this diamicton released by the ablation of debris-rich basal glacier ice in an ice contact subglacial–proglacial lacustrine environment. The overlying subaqueous and glacigenic sediment gravity flow (Facies IIIb) is associated with a temporary absence of ice cover over the coring site, and likely results from the efflux plume and the associated suspension sedimentation produced during the retreat of the ice margin. Then, the finely laminated (<1–2 mm) and normally graded meltout silts (Facies IIIa) containing dropstones and load cast features suggest underflows in an unstable ice marginal lacustrine environment hydrologically separated from the retreating glacier but containing floating glacial ice blocks. Microstructures within occasional diamictic layers indicate sudden meltout deposits from these drifting ice blocks. The above finer-grained sediments (Facies Ib) lack typical glacial microstructures, marking the onset of postglacial organic sedimentation. These postglacial sediments are affected by post-depositional deformations due to an overlying rotational slide (Facies II) that may have perturbed the associated environmental record.


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