R. Joeckel, J. Korus, J. K. Turk, C. C. Arps, N. V. Arps, L. M. Howard
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Strange Stones of Skull Creek: Basalt Glacial Erratics and Omars in Eastern Nebraska
abstract:We describe unusual stream-reworked glacially transported rocks (erratics) from a locality 50 km east of the limit of all pre-Illinoian (pre-190 ka) Pleistocene glaciations in the central USA. Almost all these erratics consist of the igneous rock basalt, and of those, the vast majority have at least one flat, smooth face. Some have two or more such faces that meet at obtuse angles along one or more well-defined, straight edges. We attribute these features, as well as laminations, plumose marks, and other features, to columnar jointing in ancient lava flows and shallow intrusions. The most likely source of these erratics is the Lake Superior region. After the Laurentide Ice Sheet deposited them, the erratics experienced at least one episode of erosion and deposition in local stream sediments as the regional landscape evolved during the Middle Pleistocene to Holocene times. Before it found its way into Skull Creek, one of the basalt erratics was polished and reshaped as a ventifact by sediment-laden Pleistocene winds as it lay exposed on an ancient land surface. We also found four examples of omars: very distinctive erratics that eroded from outcrops in Hudson Bay and transported 2,100 km into the study area.
期刊介绍:
Great Plains Research publishes original research and scholarly reviews of important advances in the natural and social sciences with relevance to and special emphases on environmental, economic and social issues in the Great Plains. It includes reviews of books and reports on symposia and conferences that included sessions on topics pertaining to the Great Plains. Papers must be comprehensible to a multidisciplinary community of scholars and lay readers who share interest in the region. Stimulating review and synthesis articles will be published if they inform, educate, and highlight both current status and further research directions.