A 'glacial erratic' is a piece of
rock that deviates from the size and type of rock native to the area in which it rests; the name "" is based on the errant location of these boulders. These rocks were carried to their current locations by
glacial ice, often over hundreds of kilometres. Erratics can range in size from pebbles to large boulders such as
Big Rock (16,500 tons) in
Alberta.
Geologists identify erratics by studying the rocks surrounding the position of the erratic and the composition of the erratic itself. Erratics were once considered evidence of a massive flood approximately 10,000 years ago, similar to the legendary floods described in the texts of ancient civilizations throughout the world. Ancient legends of an epic flood come from many cultures including Mesoamerican, Sumerian (
Epic of Gilgamesh), Hebrew (
Old Testament) and Indian culture. In the 19th Century, many scientists came to favor erratics as evidence for the end of the
last glacial maximum (
ice age) 10,000 years ago, rather than a flood. Geologists have suggested that
landslides or rockfalls initially dropped the rocks on top of glacial ice. The glaciers continued to move, carrying the rocks with it. When the ice melted, the erratics were left in their present locations.
Examples
Glacier-borne erratics
The largest known Glacial erratic is
Big Rock near
Okotoks, Alberta,
Canada. Other examples of glacial erratics include:
★ A fern-covered erratic the size of a garage is found on
Cougar Mountain near
Seattle.
★
White Rock, British Columbia gets its name from a sea-side erratic the size of a garage found on the beach at Semiahmoo Bay, right at the US border with Washington State.
★ The
Foothills Erratics Train is a deposit of rocks of many sizes. These deposits stretch in a narrow belt for about 600 km (400 miles) from the
Athabasca River Valley in Alberta to southwestern Alberta.
★
Doane Rock, the largest exposed boulder in
Cape Cod.
Flood-borne erratics

Cluster of erratics found high on the slopes of Red Mountain shown in the foreground; these were trapped in glacial ice and "rafted in" on the flood of Lake Lewis. Red Mountain is a basalt anticline; the native basalt can be seen as dark stone in the background.
In the event that glacial ice is "rafted" by a flood such as that created when the ice dam broke during the
Missoula Floods, the erratics are deposited where the ice finally releases its debris load. One of the more unusual examples is found far from its origin in Idaho at
Erratic Rock State Park just outside
McMinnville Oregon. The park includes a 40 ton specimen, the largest erratic found in the
Willamette Valley.

Yeager Rock, a 400 ton erratic on the Waterville Plateau, Washington, USA.
References
★ Imbrie, J. & K. P. Imbrie. ''Ice Ages'', Enslow Publishers, Hillside, New Jersey, 1979.
See also
★
Wedgwood Rock
★
Precarious boulder
External links
★
Okotoks Erratic
★
Airdrie Erratic
★
Alberta Archaeology
★
Cairngorm