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Cenozoic glacigene sedimentation and erosion at the Menzies Range, southern Prince Charles Mountains, Antarctica

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 September 2017

Jason M. Whitehead
Affiliation:
Antarctic CRC and IASOS, Box 252-80, Hobart, Tasmania 7001, Australia E-mail: jm_whitehead@hotmail.com
Barrie C. McKelvey
Affiliation:
Earth Sciences, University of New England, Armidale, New South Wales 2351, Australia
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Abstract

The Menzies Range in the southern Prince Charles Mountains, Antarctica, records at least four intervals of Cenozoic terrestrial glacigene sedimentation, and two periods of glacial erosion. The oldest Cenozoic strata, here named the Pardoe Formation, are >240 m thick, and consist of variable diamicts with subordinate sandstones and minor laminated lacustrine siltstones. The Pardoe Formation overlies a rugged erosion surface cut into Precambrian basement. Two subsequent Cenozoic sequences are here named informally the Trail diamicts and the younger Amphitheatre diamicts. The latter infilled the lower regions of an extremely rugged erosion surface, many components of which still dominate the present topography. The palaeodrainage of this erosion surface is markedly discordant with that of the older erosion surface underlying the Pardoe Formation. These three depositional events and the two associated erosion surfaces record warmer climates and increased snow accumulation under conditions of temperate wet-based glaciation. During the excavation of the sub-Amphitheatre diamict erosion surface, the East Antarctic ice sheet was either absent, further inland or the height of its surface relative to the Menzies Range was considerably lower than at present. The fourth and youngest depositional episode, recorded by a veneer of boulder gravel distributed along the northern flank of the Menzies Range, is from dry-based glacier ice, and assumed to be <2.6 Myr.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 2002
Figure 0

Fig. 1. (a) Location of Lambert Glacier–Amery Ice Shelf drainage system. (b) Prince Charles Mountains and the Lambert Glacier–Amery Ice Shelf drainage system. (c) Central Menzies Range.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. Cenozoic stratigraphic and ice-flow history of the central Menzies Range. Pre-Quaternary deposits are hachured. Grey arrows summarize Cenozoic ice-flow directions. Black arrows indicate Quaternary–modern flow directions. Locality numbers are indicated. Maps (a–e) summarize Regime 1, that of pre-Quaternary temperate glaciation. (f) Quaternary dry-based polar glaciation and modern ice drainage.

Figure 2

Fig. 3. (a) Distribution of pre-Quaternary deposits on the central Menzies Range. Arrow indicates axis of the Pardoe palaeovalley. Location of cross-sections illustrated in Figure 3b indicated. (b) Pardoe palaeovalley cross-sections, and locations of Pardoe Formation measured sections.

Figure 3

Fig. 4. The Pardoe Formation type section at location 8 (73° 27′ S, 61°54′ E).

Figure 4

Fig. 5. Pardoe Bench or location 2 (∼2100 m), viewed looking westwards from location 3. The cross-valley profile of the Pardoe palaeovalley, infilled with >200 m of Pardoe Formation, is indicated (arrows). The steep southern wall of the palaeovalley contrasts with the gently sloping and benched northern wall. The lobe of ice (bottom right) is lateral ice of Fisher Glacier flowing southwards down into a cirque valley. Height to bench surface ∼450 m.

Figure 5

Fig. 6. Trail diamict overlying Precambrian basement atop the eastern wall of Thursday Cirque at ∼2060 m. View looking north-northeast. Encircled figure indicates scale. Fisher Glacier (∼1600 m), left background.

Figure 6

Fig. 7 View looking westwards into the southwestern head of the Amphitheatre. Pardoe Peak (2981 m) overlooks a perched crossvalley profile (location 6) oriented approximately orthogonal to the trend of the Amphitheatre floor, some 600 m below. The floor of the Amphitheatre ascends gently, over 4 km, from 1500 m (bottom right) to 1820 m (left middle-distance). Arrows indicate trimline delineated by Quaternary gravels (Qg) mantling the floor and far wall of the Amphitheatre. Rock outcrops (left foreground) are 700 m above the floor of the Amphitheatre.

Figure 7

Fig. 8. (a) Elevated surface of the East Antarctic ice sheet encroaches onto the Menzies Range. Conditions of polar (dry-based) glaciation inhibit snow precipitation and thus prevent development of alpine glaciers on the Menzies Range, (b) Warmer conditions diminish the ice sheet and so lower its surface. Closer proximity to open waters promotes snow precipitation and the development of alpine glaciers at the Menzies Range.