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Glacial erratic

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Image:Glacial erratic in alaska.gif

A glacial erratic is a piece of rock carried by glacial ice some distance from the rock outcrop from which it came. Erratics can range in size from pebbles to massive pieces such as the Okotoks (16,500 tons) and Airdrie erratics found in Alberta, Canada. They can be found miles away from their original location.

Geologists identify erratics by studying the rocks surrounding the position of the erratic and the rock of the erratic itself. Erratics were once considered evidence of a biblical flood, but in the 19th Century scientists gradually came to accept that erratics pointed to an ice age in Earth's past. Geologists have suggested that landslides or rockfalls initially dropped the rocks on top of glacial ice. The glaciers continued to move, carrying the rocks with it. When the ice melted, the erratics were left in their present locations.

Angular glacial erratic on Lembert Dome.

Contents

[edit] Examples

[edit] Glacier borne erattics

The largest known Glacial erratic is the "Big Rock" erratic near Okotoks, Alberta, Canada. Other examples of glacial erratics include:

[edit] Flood borne erattics

In the event that glacial ice is "rafted" by a flood such as that created when the ice dam broke during the Missoula Floods, the erattics are deposited where the ice finally releases its debris load. One of the more unusual examples is found far from its origin in Idaho at Erratic Rock State Park just outside McMinnville Oregon. The park includes a 40 ton specimen, the largest erratic found in the Willamette Valley.

[edit] References

  • Imbrie, J. & K. P. Imbrie. Ice Ages, Enslow Publishers, Hillside, New Jersey, 1979.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

da:Vandreblok de:Findling et:Rändkivi fr:Bloc erratique nl:Zwerfsteen pl:Głaz narzutowy sk:Erratikum fi:Siirtolohkare


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