Introduction
One of the major problems in understanding the dynamics of the Antarctic ice sheet is to determine whether the flow is steady or fluctuates with a period of thousands of years. Over much of Antarctica the net ice–accumulation rate is greater than the flow rate to the sea Reference Allison(Allison, 1979), suggesting that the ice thickness is slowly increasing at present, and that the flow is not steady but may surge periodically.
In this context the Lambert Glacier and Amery Ice Shelf drainage system is important; it drains the central part of the east Antarctic ice sheet, and it is the fourth largest drainage system in Antarctica (Fig. 1).
Suggestions that Lambert Glacier could surge periodically come from two sources: from consideration of the flux rate and surface slope of Lambert Glacier (Reference Budd, Mclnnes, Pittock, Pittock, Frakes, Jenssen, Peterson and ZillmanBudd and Mclnncs. [c1978]), and from consideration of detailed glaciological measurements, which show that the present flow out of the Lambert Glacier basin is about one–half the average accumulation rate within the basin (Reference AllisonAllison, 1979). As yet, however, there is no published geomorphological evidence for surging of any Antarctic glaciers.
The ice surface of lower Lambert Glacier and the Amery Ice Shelf ranges from 50 to 300 m above sea level, and is about 2 000 m below the surface of the surrounding ice sheet. In this relative depression, numerous bedrock nunataks are exposed from the coastline to 500 km inland; these nunataks form the Prince Charles Mountains. I have recently made a study of the (fig 1) nunataks using colour vertical air photographs at 1 :60 000 scale, flown between 1971 and 1974 by the Commonwealth of Australia’s Division of National Mapping.
Geomorphology
The regional geomorphology of the Prince Charles Mountains area was described by Reference TrailTrail (1964), the landforms of a more important nunatak, Mount Menzies, by Reference Derbyshire and PetersonDerbyshire and Peterson (1978), and the weathering and mineralogy of the moraines by Reference BardinBardin (in press). Bedrock geology was described by Reference TingeyTingey (in press).
Reference TrailTrail (1964) recognized marginal moraines 50 m above the present ice level and he attributed them to fluctuations of the present ice–drainage system. Reference Tingey and EnglandTingey and England (unpublished) and Reference TingeyTingey (1974), from the presence of vertical cliffs and the retention of a soft clay fraction in a high moraine, inferred that at Mount Stinear the Lambert Glacier surface has recently dropped 800 m.
The relief of rock above the general ice level ranges from about 1000 m along the axis of lower Lambert Glacier to zero at about 2 000 m attitude on the plateau. Rock above the general ice level is usually less well exposed at higher altitudes, because it is increasingly draped by ice and snow.
The relative ages of rock surfaces, screes, and moraines have been primarily determined by the principle of superposition at places where an upper formation covers part of a lower formation. These relative ages have been roughly correlated throughout the area by assuming the same age for similar rocks with the same amount of weathering and ice wedging.
The relative age of the surface of exposed, glaciated solid rock can be roughly determined by the amount of non–glacial modification–by the extent of covering screes where the surface is steep, and by the depth of differential wind erosion in flat exposed areas.
The relative ages of the surface of surficial deposits such as moraine and scree can be determined by surface appearance and colour. On air photographs, young moraines generally have the texture of fine sandpaper–this is due to large boulders that project above the general surface. On a larger scale, either the surface is smooth, except for rare sinuous depositional ridges, or it consists of a thermokarst topography (of large closed depressions) which has quickly replaced the smooth initial surface, by the melting of underlying dead ice (Reference Derbyshire and PetersonDerbyshire and Peterson, 1978). On old moraines these surface features are partly or completely destroyed by the action of ice wedges; these initially flatten the surface and later form patterned ground–a polygonal pattern of raised mounds up to 10 m in diameter and 3 m in height (Reference TrailTrail, 1964). Commonly, the moraine is black when fresh, and becomes grey and then red as weathering increases with time. The same colour changes and development of patterned ground also take place on scree and so can be used to estimate relative ages of the upper surface of screes.
In areas where moraine is at present being deposited there are commonly remnants of higher and older parallel moraines, which are thought to have been deposited by higher ice with about the same flow pattern as today. The upper moraine limit is usually well defined; it often consists of a line of exceptionally large boulders or a low symmetrical ridge several metres high. Between the upper limit and the present ice level, the moraine in cross–section appears to be nearly uniform in thickness. At places where the moraine is thin it can usually be seen to rest on unmodified older, strongly patterned ground (Reference Wilson, Rotterdam and BalkemaWilson, 1978). At the down stream end of nunataks, thin moraine often rests on glaciated bedrock with a surface of the same age as the moraine. Generally the moraine is too thick to see through.
Height of old moraines
The term “moraine height” is used here for the height of the top of the old moraine above the top of the present–day marginal moraine.
The relation between ice–surface altitude and moraine height is shown in plan in Figure 2 and in cross–section in Figure 3. Moraine heights were obtained from air photographs by parallax–bar measurements; they have an uncertainty of 10%. Ices–urface altitudes south of lat. 72° S. are from Reference Morgan and BuddMorgan and Budd (1975), in the northern outcrop area from unpublished barometric traverses using helicopter transport, and elsewhere from published 1; 1 000 000 maps.
Most of the old moraines are thought to be of the same age, because their surface has the same geomorphic age and because most of the moraine heights conform to a regular pattern. The other old moraines are considerably older.
In the northern Prince Charles Mountains along the east–flowing scylla and Charybdis Glaciers (cross–sections A – A′ and B – B′ of Figure 3), the moraine heights generally increase systematically down–stream, from zero at 1 500 m glacier altitude to an observed maximum of about 100 m at 500 m glacier altitude. Hence moraine height changes by about –0.1 m for every metre change in glacier altitude. West of Mount Meredith and near Shaw Massif (cross-sections C – C′ and D – D′), some old moraine heights have a similar trend but some are anomalously low. For Fisher Glacier (cross–section E – E′). the moraine height is constant at approximately 200 m, from 2 000 m to 600 m glacier altitude. At nunataks adjacent to lower Lambert Glacier (cross–section F – F′). moraine heights are roughly constant at about 200 m, the altitude of the adjacent glacier ice ranging from 600 to 50 m.
The centre of lower Lambert Glacier and the Amery Ice Shelf are slightly lower than the edge adjacent to the nunataks (Fig. 2). In order to estimate the former ice level of the centre of lower Lambert Glacier and the Amery Ice Shelf, the moraine-height data are extrapolated using the –0.1 m per m relation derived above. These estimates are shown as asterisks in the Figure 3 cross–sections. They give an ice level of 200 ± 20 m above present level for the centre of lower Lambert Glacier from lat. 73° to 71° S., and about 150 m for the centre of the Amery Ice Shelf at lat. 70° S.
No old moraine was recognized on the nunataks between Mellor Glacier and upper Lambert Glacier, although suitable sites exist for presentation of old moraines, and new moraines are widespread. Along Mawson Escarpment old moraines are weakly developed.
In the Fisher Glacier area, old moraines of three distinct ages are recognized at Mount Menzies and Mount Ruker (lat, 73° 37′ S., long. 64° 20′ E.), and of two distinct ages at Mount Rubin (lat. 73° 30′ S., long. 65° 40′ E.), and possibly at Mount scherger (lat. 73° 15’ S., long. 62° 50′ E.). The older moraines are 20–50% higher and of much larger volume than the latest moraine. At Mount Menzies and Mount Ruker, the three moraines are well separated in time, the youngest having minor surface weathering and slight or no development of patterned ground, and the oldest being strongly weathered and having depositional features and patterned ground equally prominent. A rise in glacier level and deposition of a moraine would largely destroy (fig 3) evidence for earlier smaller rises, so it seems likely that there have been unrecorded slightly smaller rises, and the total number of rises is greater than three. In the northern Prince Charles Mountains, moraines of two distinct ages are poorly developed at Mount Lanyon (lat. 71° 15′ S., long. 67° 10′ E.) and Mount Trott (lat. 70° 45′ S., long. 66° 20′ E.).
Moraines along the margin of Fisher Glacier and lower Lambert Glacier differ from moraines along scylla Glacier and Charybdis Glacier. Fisher Glacier and lower Lambert Glacier moraines thinly cover the lower part of patterned and unpatterned screes, thinly cover older patterned ground, form thick deposits on some areas of flat ground, and at the down–stream end of some large nunataks they often rest on irregularly sculptured unweathered bedrock. This bedrock contains rare closed depressions with a base 100 m below the level of adjacent solid rock and nearby glacier; these depressions contain only minor moraine. Along scylla Glacier and Charybdis Glacier, the youngest of the old moraines thinly covers unpatterned scree, but on patterned ground the moraine often appears to be a thick composite of several moraines with a similar height; the outer moraine is thin and relatively unweathered, and the inner moraine(s) is thick and strongly patterned.
Climatic changes or surges
The glaciers draining into Lambert Glacier have catchments remote from the ocean, so any temporary increase in accumulation rate is likely to affect the catchment of several glaciers of the drainage system and result in simultaneous higher ice-sheet and glacier levels in these adjacent catchments. It is unlikely that there will be repeated increases in accumulation rate in one catchment area which do not affect adjacent similar catchments. However, if the accumulation rate is constant, then ice–sheet and glacier levels would remain constant in most catchments but would repeatedly rise and fall in periodically surging catchments. There is good evidence for no change in ice level at 2 000 m in the area of upper scylla Glacier and Charybdis Glacier, poorer evidence for no change above 1200 m on upper Lambert Glacier, and at 1000 m east of Mawson Escarpment, and very strong evidence for at least three changes of 200 m at 2 000 m altitude on Fisher Glacier and Geysen Glacier. This observed pattern is not consistent with changes in accumulation rate but is perfectly consistent with periodic surges of one catchment.
It is inferred that all the old moraines are caused by repeated surging of Fisher Glacier, or possibly simultaneous repeated surging of Fisher Glacier and Geysen Glacier. The surges would raise the level oflower Lambert Glacier and the Amery Ice Shelf, which in turn would raise the level of the lower part of the other glaciers. During a surge, Fisher Glacier and lower Lambert Glacier would have very high velocities; this would explain the difference between their moraines and moraines elsewhere, as described above.
Acknowledgements
For the air–photograph coverage I wish to thank surveyors of the Division of National Mapping and support members of the Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions. I am grateful for discussions with R. J. Tingey, D. S. Trail, Professor H. W. Wellman, and I. F. Allison. The figures were drawn by J. Rayner–Sharpe. Publication is by permission of the Director, Bureau of Mineral Resources, Canberra.