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Journal ArticleDOI

Buried bedrock valleys and glacial and subglacial meltwater erosion in southern Ontario, Canada

Cunhai Gao
- 01 May 2011 - 
- Vol. 48, Iss: 5, pp 801-818
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TLDR
Amorphometric features from a recently compiled bedrock topography map by the Ontario Geological Survey suggest a glacial erosion origin for the buried large bedrock valleys and troughs in southern Ontario as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
Morphometric features from a recently compiled bedrock topography map by the Ontario Geological Survey suggest a glacial erosion origin for the buried large bedrock valleys and troughs in southern Ontario. The bedrock valleys at Milverton, Wingham and Mount Forest are tunnel valleys, resulting from subglacial meltwater erosion beneath the Huron ice lobe, probably during or shortly after the Late-Wisconsinan glacial maximum. Diagnostic features for this interpretation include abrupt valley beginning and termination, uneven longitudinal valley profiles and up-slope gradients. The Dundas bedrock valley is the western extension of the Lake Ontario Basin. No comparable bedrock valleys were found to connect it to the Milverton valley for a joint drainage system as previously suggested. The Laurentian bedrock trough is the southeastward extension of the Georgian Bay Basin, both developed along shale bedrock between the Precambrian shield highlands and the Niagara Escarpment, resulting from long-term mechanical weathering associated with Pleistocene glacial erosion. This bedrock low has a floor that exceeds 50 km in width and is 26 m and more below the current water level of Georgian Bay. It could drain Georgian Bay should the drift cover be removed. There is no evidence to suggest that a preglacial river channel, if it existed, is still preserved in the floor of the Laurentian trough as previously suggested. The framework for an intensely glacially sculpted bedrock surface differs from the previous view for simple modification of a preglacial landscape and is, therefore, important in regional subsurface geological mapping and groundwater studies.

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Citations
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Morphological properties of tunnel valleys of the southern sector of theLaurentide Ice Sheet and implications for their formation

TL;DR: In this paper, the spatial pattern and morphometry of tunnel valleys and associated glacial landforms along the southern sector of the former Laurentide Ice Sheet from high-resolution digital elevation models are analyzed.
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The effect of long-term regional pumping on hydrochemistry and dissolved gas content in an undeveloped shale-gas-bearing aquifer in southwestern Ontario, Canada

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the ambient geochemical conditions in these shales in the context of other strata, including Ordovician shales, and discuss shale-related natural and anthropogenic processes contributing to hydrogeochemical conditions.
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Analysis of a large spatiotemporal groundwater quality dataset, Ontario 2010–2017: Informing human health risk assessment and testing guidance for private drinking water wells

TL;DR: The effect of repeat sampling of private well water in Ontario is assessed and the efficacy of geographically- and/or temporally specific testing recommendations and health risk assessments are investigated to consider the impact of spatial and temporal factors on the susceptibility of this drinking water source.
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Geophysical, geological, and hydrogeological characterization of a tributary buried bedrock valley in southern Ontario

TL;DR: Buried bedrock valleys infilled with Quaternary-aged sediment have the potential to become productive aquifers owing to prevalent sand and gravel deposits often associated with these topographic lo...
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Geologic controls on hydraulic conductivity in a karst-influenced carbonate bedrock groundwater system in southern Ontario, Canada

TL;DR: In this paper, a large set of hydraulic conductivity values has been integrated with the geologic characterization of a Paleozoic-age carbonate groundwater system to assess the relative influence of specific geologic features on hydraulic conductivities.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Sediment deformation beneath glaciers: Rheology and geological consequences

TL;DR: In this paper, a one-dimensional theory of subglacial deformation is developed in which the empirical flow law is coupled with a model of sub-glacial hydrology and consolidation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Buried and open tunnel valleys in Denmark—erosion beneath multiple ice sheets

TL;DR: Tunnel valleys are large, elongate and irregular depressions cut beneath the margin of former ice sheets as mentioned in this paper, and they play a substantial role for the entire hydraulic system beneath ice sheets and thus also for ice sheet behaviour.
Journal ArticleDOI

Subglacial hydrology in north-western germany during the last glaciation: groundwater flow, tunnel valleys and hydrological cycles

TL;DR: In this paper, a model of groundwater dynamics in an overpressured system of subglacial aquifers and aquitards under the marginal portion of the Scandinavian ice sheet in northwestern Germany was coupled with calculations of basal meltwater production rates and with field evidence of meltwater erosional features.
Journal ArticleDOI

Seismic imaging of mid-Pleistocene tunnel-valleys in the North Sea Basin—high resolution from low frequencies

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that low-frequency bandwidth is not necessarily a limiting factor for the seismic resolution of glacigenic morpho-sedimentary features, and propose a simple interpretation of time-transgressive tunnel-valley formation by coeval glaciofluvial erosion and backfill beneath the outer tens of kilometres of the northward receding Elsterian ice sheet margin.
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