A field trip to Namibia to study volcanic rocks led to an unexpected discovery by West Virginia University geologists Graham Andrews and Sarah Brown.
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Drumlins, hills formed in places once covered by glaciers, were discovered in Namibia by WVU's Graham Andrews [Credit: WVU] |
"We quickly realized what we were looking at because we both grew up in areas of the world that had been under glaciers, me in Northern Ireland and Sarah in northern Illinois," said Andrews, an assistant professor of geology. "It's not like anything we see in West Virginia where we're used to flat areas and then gorges and steep-sided valleys down into hollows."
After returning home from the trip, Andrews began researching the origins of the Namibian drumlins, only to learn they had never been studied.
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The drumlins were formed by fast-moving ice floes instead of slow melting ice [Credit: WVU] |
Andrews teamed up with WVU geology senior Andy McGrady to use morphometrics, or measurements of shapes, to determine if the drumlins showed any patterns that would reflect regular behaviors as the ice carved them.
While normal glaciers have sequential patterns of growing and melting, they do not move much, Andrews explained. However, they determined that the drumlins featured large grooves, which showed that the ice had to be moving at a fast pace to carve the grooves.
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Megawhalebacks oriented NW/SE covered by sand and termite mounds [Credit: WVU] |
"The ice carved big, long grooves in the rock as it moved," Andrews said. "It wasn't just that there was ice there, but there was an ice stream. It was an area where the ice was really moving fast."
McGrady used freely available information from Google Earth and Google Maps to measure their length, width and height.
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Megawhalebacks oriented NW/SE covered by sand, trees and shrubs [Credit: WVU] |
Their findings also confirm that southern Africa was located over the South Pole during this period.
"These features provide yet another tie between southern Africa and south America to show they were once joined," Andrews said.
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Zoomed in photo shows striations in the megawhaleback, or carvings in the bedrock made by moving ice [Credit: WVU] |
"This is a great example of a fundamental discovery and new insights into the climatic history of our world that remain to be discovered," said Tim Carr, chair of the Department of Geology and Geography.
Source: West Virginia University [February 04, 2019]
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