6533b853fe1ef96bd12ad45a

RESEARCH PRODUCT

An erratic dropstone of granodiorite with a water-escape structure from a Weichselian terrace along the River Gauja (NE Latvia)

A.j. Van LoonMāris KrievānsMāris NartišsMałgorzata Pisarska-jamroży

subject

Water escape010506 paleontologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryGeochemistrySedimentWeathering010502 geochemistry & geophysicsDropstone01 natural sciencesOverburdenTerrace (geology)ShieldGlaciolacustrine depositsGeomorphologyGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface Processes

description

Abstract A river terrace of the River Gauja (Latvia), built of Weichselian glaciolacustrine deposits, contains a large number of erratic boulders from the Fennoscandian Shield. These erratic boulders include several types of granites and granodiorites. Some of the granodiorites are so strongly weathered that they fall apart into mm-sized grains of individual minerals when it is attempted to take them out of the host sediment. This strongly weathered nature makes them physically comparable to unconsolidated sand. A consequence is that they may be subjected to soft-sediment deformation. The erratic granodiorite boulder under study here is the first described to show such a soft-sediment deformation structure inside: it has been intruded by a water/sediment mixture composed of the underlying silty/sandy material that must have been liquefied, possibly due to pressure exerted by the overburden, or – more likely – by the weight of the concentration of gravel of which the granodiorite boulder forms a part. The overpressurized water/sediment mixture tried to escape upwards through, among a few other places, the strongly weathered granodiorite, forming an escape structure.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.catena.2016.01.023