'Boulder clay' in geology, is a deposit of
clay, often full of boulders, which is formed in and beneath
glaciers and ice-sheets wherever they are found, but is in a special sense the typical deposit of the Glacial Period in northern
Europe and
America. Boulder clay is variously known as
till or ground
moraine (Ger. ''Blocklehme, Geschiebemergel'' or ''Grundmoraene''; Fr. ''argile a blocc1ux, moraine profonde''; Swed. ''Krosstenslera''). It is usually a stiff, tough clay devoid of
stratification; though some varieties are distinctly laminated. Occasionally, within the boulder clay, there are irregular lenticular masses of more or less stratified
sand,
gravel or
loam. As the boulder clay is the result of the abrasion (direct or indirect) of the older rocks over which the ice has travelled, it takes its color from them; thus, in
Britain, over
Triassic and Old
Red Sandstone areas the clay is red, over
Carboniferous rocks it is often black, over
Silurian rock it may be buff or grey, and where the ice has passed over
chalk the clay may be quite white and chalky (chalky boulder clay). Much boulder clay is of a bluish-grey color where unexposed, but it becomes brown upon being weathered.
The boulders are held within the clay in an irregular manner, and they vary in size from mere pellets up to masses many tons in weight. Usually they are somewhat oblong, and often they possess a flat side or sole; they may be angular, sub-angular, or well rounded, and, if they are hard rocks, they frequently bear grooves and scratches caused by contact with other rocks while held firmly in the moving ice. Like the clay in which they are borne, the boulders belong to districts over which the ice has travelled; in some regions they are mainly
limestones or
sandstones; in others they are
granite,
basalts,
gneisses, etc.; indeed, they may consist of any hard rock. By the nature of the contained boulders it is often possible to trace the path along which a vanished ice-sheet moved; thus in the Glacial drift of the east coast of England many
Scandinavian rocks can be recognized.
With the exception of
foraminifera, which have been found in the boulder clay of widely separated regions,
fossils are practically unknown; but in some maritime districts marine shells have been incorporated with the clay.
In Literature
Boulder clay is mentioned in the poem, "Bruises" by Lea Remsyon. Its use is notable for its juxtaposition of the word 'cabernet'.
References
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