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Earthquake Origin of Superglacial Drift on the Glaciers of the Martin River Area, South-Central Alaska

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 January 2017

S. J. Tuthill*
Affiliation:
Department of Geology and Geography, Muskingum College, New Concord, Ohio, U.S.A
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Abstract

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1966
Figure 0

Fig. 1. Map of the Martin River and “Sioux” Glaciers area, south-central Alaska. Adapted from the U.S. Geological Survey 1 : 63,360 Topographic Series, Cordova B1, B2, C1 and C2 quadrangles. Approximate headings of views of Figures 2–6 are shown

Figure 1

Fig. 2. Oblique aerial photograph of Martin River and “Sioux” Glaciers taken from over Charlotte Ridge and viewed towards the north-north-west. Deadwood Lake (left foreground) and “Bee Lake” (center foreground) mark the present ice margin of Martin River Glacier. Note the discrete debris avalanche deposit on the proximal side of the end moraine of “Sioux Glacier”, transverse to the medial moraine. The large lateral moraine on the west margin of the glacier traces proximally to the couloir from which the debris issued. Three ridges on the distal side of the debris avalanche mentioned above may also be of the same origin.

(Photograph by Bradford Washburn; No. 976, Boston Museum of Science, 1938)
Figure 2

Fig. 3. Oblique photograph taken from the hill north of Tokun Lake of the terminal moraine (left) and current ice margin (right center) of Martin River and “Sioux” Glaciers, viewed towards the north. Debris avalanche material and the west lateral moraine of “Sioux Glacier” have dispersed laterally during the 7 yr. which elapsed between this and that shown in Figure 2.

(Photograph by Don J. Miller ; No. 259, U.S. Geological Survey, 1945)
Figure 3

Fig. 4. Oblique aerial photograph of the current ice margin of Martin River and “Sioux” Glaciers taken from over Deadwood Lake and viewed towards the north-north-west. “Miller Lake” in the foreground is ice-walled on its north margin and has drift-insulated stagnant ice on its south margin. The lateral distribution of the rock debris of the terminus and of the west lateral moraine on “Sioux Glacier” gives no clue to the debris avalanche origin of the superglacial drift. “Miller Lake” is a coalesced group of the ice-walled sink-hole lakes seen in Figure 2.

(Photograph by Austin Post, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, 1960)
Figure 4

Fig. 5. Oblique aerial photograph of “Sioux Glacier” (right center) taken from above the terminal moraine of Martin River Glacier and viewed towards the north-north-east. Two large debris avalanches (center foreground) presumably occurred at the same time as that on “Sioux Glacier” (i.e. 27 March 1964). The medial moraine and former terminal debris of “Sioux Glacier” are characterized by slightly darker color. White patches in the terminal moraine area are snow. (15 June 1964)

Figure 5

Fig. 6. Vertical aerial photograph of lower “Sioux Glacier” (from 11,000 ft. (3,353 m.) altitude). Rock debris from the 1964 avalanche is lighter in color than that on the medial moraine and the pre-1938 avalanche debris material. Rock material is estimated to average 5–5.5 ft. (1.52–1.68 m.) in thickness.

(Photograph by Austin Post; Exp. 239, Roll V648, U.S. Geological Survey; 24 August 1964)
Figure 6

Fig. 7. Oblique aerial photograph of five large snow and rock avalanches on upper Martin River Glacier at about lat. 60° 35′ N., long. 143° 50′ W.

(Photograph by Austin Post; No. K642–97, U.S. Geological Survey; 24 August 1964)