Provenance of middle to late Pleistocene tills in Illinois, U.S.A.: evidence for long-distance (∼ 2000 km) ice transport during two successive glaciations
Author:
Malone David H.1, Grimley David A.2, Gifford Jennifer N.3, Colgan Patrick M.4, Craddock John P.1, Phillips Andrew C.2, Meister Paul A.1, Lowe Theodor H.1, Rickels Ellyn S.1
Affiliation:
1. 1 Department of Geology, Illinois State University, Campus Box 4400, Bloomington, Illinois 61701, U.S.A. 2. 2 Illinois State Geological Survey, Prairie Research Institute, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 615 East Peabody Drive, Champaign, Illinois 61820, U.S.A. 3. 3 University of Mississippi, Geology & Geological Engineering, P.O. Box 1848, University, Mississippi 38677, U.S.A. 4. 4 Department of Geology, Grand Valley State University, Padnos Hall of Science, 1 Campus Drive, Allendale, Michigan 49401, U.S.A.
Abstract
ABSTRACTZircons extracted from 567 granitic cobbles, in middle to late Pleistocene tills of the Lake Michigan Lobe in Illinois, provide a remarkably consistent Archean age of ∼ 2.7 Ga, with 87% dating between 2.6 and 2.8 Ga. This finding suggests a persistent glacial flow path of the southern Laurentide ice sheet from the Superior Province into the Lake Michigan basin during Marine Isotope Stage 6 (Illinois Episode) and Marine Isotope Stage 2 (Wisconsin Episode). Based on published crystalline bedrock ages in the Canadian Shield, these cobbles are interpreted to have been transported as much as ∼ 2000 km southwestward from the Quebec–Labrador ice dome, east of Hudson Bay, to the ice-sheet terminus in central to southern Illinois, USA. Some of the glacial flow likely skirted eastern Hudson Bay (source of Omar erratics) and southern James Bay, and traversed outcrops of Huronian jasper conglomerate and diamictite along the north shore of Lake Huron. Transport across the Paleozoic strata may have been enhanced, in part, by an ice stream that advanced across relatively soft and water-saturated sediments that underlie the Lake Michigan basin. The Lake Michigan basin, although present earlier in some form, was likely significantly eroded and overdeepened by accelerated glacial flow and erosion during MIS-6, further constraining the southern Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS) flow path and influencing its subsequent flow during the last glaciation. As the Lake Michigan Lobe thinned and radiated out from the Lake Michigan basin, topographic effects led to separation of sublobes during the LIS advance to its southernmost extent.
Publisher
Society for Sedimentary Geology
Reference54 articles.
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