Glacial and postglacial geology near lake tennyson, clarence river, new zealand

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Abstract

Otiran valley glaciers extended 15 km down the upper Clarence Valley in central Marlborough, South Island, New Zealand. A massive Otiran terminal moraine complex, composed of moraines of three glacial advances, impounds Lake Tennyson. The moraines are early and middle Otiran, and possibly late Otiran ‐ early Aranuian in age, based on relative position and differences in moraine morphology, weathering rinds, and soils. Radiocarbon ages from a tributary (Serpentine Creek) suggest the latest major episode of aggradation in the Clarence Valley was in progress by 11.3 ka, and had ended by 9.2 ka. Postglacial history was dominated by incision of glacial outwash, deposition of small alluvial fans, and landsliding near the trace of the Awatere Fault. Fault scarps of the Awatere Fault and of unnamed parallel splays displace early Otiran moraines up to 19 m and early Holocene terraces up to 2.6 m. © 1992 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

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McCalpin, J. P. (1992). Glacial and postglacial geology near lake tennyson, clarence river, new zealand. New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 35(2), 201–210. https://doi.org/10.1080/00288306.1992.9514514

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