41 results on '"David Huddart"'
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2. Index
- Author
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David Huddart
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- 2014
3. Chapter 5 Writing after the End of Empire: Composition, Community, and Creativity
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David Huddart
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- 2014
4. Chapter 6 Slow Reading: The Opacity of World Literatures
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David Huddart
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- 2014
5. Chapter 2 Grammars of Living Break their Tense: World Englishes and Cultural Translation
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David Huddart
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- 2014
6. Chapter 4 Declarations of Linguistic Independence: The Postcolonial Dictionary
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David Huddart
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- 2014
7. Bibliography
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David Huddart
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- 2014
8. Chapter 3 English in the Conversation of Mankind: World Englishes and Global Citizenship
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David Huddart
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- 2014
9. Chapter 1 Involuntary Associations: ‘Postcolonial Studies’ and ‘World Englishes’
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David Huddart
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- 2014
10. Half Title Page, Series Information, Title Page, Copyright, Epigraph, Acknowledgements
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David Huddart
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- 2014
11. Involuntary Associations : Postcolonial Studies and World Englishes
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David Huddart
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- 2014
12. Australian landscape memoir as conservationist vehicle: Winton, Tredinnick, Greer
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David Huddart and Graham Huggan
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Cultural Studies ,Subjectivity ,geography ,White (horse) ,Plateau ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Memoir ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Art history ,Art ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,media_common - Abstract
In this essay, we propose to study three recent Australian landscape memoirs – Tim Winton’s Island Home (2015), Mark Tredinnick’s The Blue Plateau (2009) and Germaine Greer’s White Beech (2013) – all of which demonstrate the capacity of landscapes to act as perceptual conduits for the fundamental tension between world and self. Our main contention is that landscape memoir acts as a pre-eminent vehicle for this tension, which is captured across different times and spaces and among multiple, intricately co-constituted life-worlds. Landscape memoir, in this and other ways, functions as both a multi-sensory phenomenological instrument for the recording of physical and emotional engagement with landscape and a distinct, episodically organised mode of life writing that seeks to understand the fractured nature of individual selfhood in the context of a more-than-human world. The essay also looks at the capacity of memoirs of this kind to operate as vehicles for conservationist thinking and action. In each of our three main cases, landscape mediates between an insecure self and a world or worlds that are portrayed as being threatened, although this is not enough in itself to establish a basis for the three works as ‘conservationist’ texts. However, all three can be seen as individual enquiries into different kinds of conservation that use the techniques and characteristics of landscape memoir to reflect on the material possibilities of personal and collective recovery (Winton) and ecological restoration (Greer); or, over and against these, to mark the elegiac registration of irretrievable loss (Tredinnick).
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- 2020
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13. Five Younger Dryas black mats in Mexico and their stratigraphic and paleoenvironmental context
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David Huddart, Gabriela Domínguez-Vázquez, Allen West, James L. Bischoff, Isabel Israde-Alcántara, and Silvia Gonzalez
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GB ,010506 paleontology ,geography ,GE ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Pleistocene ,Authigenic ,Aquatic Science ,Sedimentary basin ,CC ,01 natural sciences ,Sedimentary depositional environment ,Paleontology ,Sedimentary rock ,Younger Dryas ,Sedimentology ,Geology ,Holocene ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
The Younger Dryas interval (YD) was a period of widespread, abrupt climate change that occurred between 12,900 and 11,700 cal yr BP (10,900–10,000 14 C BP). Many sites in the Northern Hemisphere preserve a sedimentary record across the onset of the YD interval, including sites investigated in sedimentary basins located in central Mexico (Chapala, Cuitzeo, Acambay), the Basin of Mexico (Tocuila), and northern Mexico (El Cedral). Deposits consist of lacustrine or marginal lake sediments that were deposited during the Pleistocene and the Holocene. At the Tocuila and Acambay sites, Pleistocene fossil vertebrate assemblages, mainly mammoths (Mammuthus columbi), are found in association with a distinctive organic layer, sometimes called the black mat that formed during the YD. At the Chapala, Cuitzeo, Acambay, and Tocuila sites the black mats contain a suite of distinctive microscopic and mineralogical signatures and are accompanied by a sharp change in the depositional environments as supported by diatom and pollen studies reported here. The signatures include magnetic, Fe-rich microspherules, silica melted droplets with aerodynamic shapes (tektites), large amounts of charcoal, and sometimes nanodiamonds (Cuitzeo), all of which were deposited at the onset of the YD. The geochemistry of the microspherules indicates that they are not anthropogenic, authigenic or of cosmic or volcanic origin, and instead, were produced by melting and quenching of terrestrial sediments. Here, we present the stratigraphy at five field sites, the analyses of magnetic microspherules, including major element composition and scanning electron microscopy images. All of these materials are associated with charcoal and soot, which are distinctive stratigraphic markers for the YD layer at several sites in Mexico. © 2017 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
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- 2017
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14. Adventure Tourism in the Canadian Arctic
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Tim Stott and David Huddart
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Craft ,Fishery ,Geography ,biology ,Arctic ,Cruise ,Beluga ,Wildlife ,Narwhal ,biology.organism_classification ,Tundra ,Tourism - Abstract
The Canadian Arctic is defined and described and the numbers of tourists for the various regions estimated. The impact of adventure tourism on wildlife is documented, such as polar bear hunting and polar bear viewing, and the management approaches to conserve this iconic species are outlined; the possible spread of Giardia by tourists is discussed; and the impact of tourism on marine mammals and their management is described for beluga, narwhal and seals. There are impacts on birds too and on terrestrial vegetation in the tundra. Examples of aboriginal tourism are documented, including the development of the world-class Carcross mountain bike trails. Pleasure craft and cruise tourism have impacts, and the management approaches to minimise these are discussed. Finally the maintenance of the rich and diverse archaeological and historical sites in the face of tourist impacts is discussed.
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- 2019
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15. Early-Mid Pleistocene environments in the Valsequillo Basin, Central Mexico: a reassessment
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Christopher H. Vane, David Huddart, Sarah E. Metcalfe, Melanie J. Leng, Jason R. Kirby, and Silvia Gonzalez
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010506 paleontology ,Early Pleistocene ,Pleistocene ,Paleontology ,Pyroclastic rock ,Structural basin ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Megafauna ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Period (geology) ,Tephra ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Volcanic ash - Abstract
The Valsequillo Basin in Central Mexico has been of interest due to the presence of megafauna and evidence for early human occupation, but research has been controversial. It has been suggested that extensive and deep lakes characterised the Early Pleistocene environment but sediment exposure is highly fragmentary and reliable dating has been difficult. Here we report, for the first time, Early Pleistocene palaeoenvironmental reconstructions using stable isotopes,diatoms, tephra and pollen. We studied several stratigraphic sections of mainly non-volcanic rocks, containing the 1.3 Ma Xalnene Ash as a stratigraphic marker. The isotope and other proxy data show that topographically low points in the basin were occupied by spring-fed, shallow water lakes during the Early – Mid Pleistocene, with a trend to drier conditions. The basin was a dynamic volcaniclastic environment during this period, with the production of the Toluquilla Volcano sequence and other rhyolitic-dacitic volcanic ashes interbedded with the lake sediments at the sections studied. There is no evidence from the sections for extensive and deep lakes before or after the Xalnene ash deposition. The presence of lakes in the basin during the Early Pleistocene would have made it attractive for megafauna.
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- 2016
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16. Introduction: Survival of the Death Sentence
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David Huddart, David Coughlan, Christoforos Diakoulakis, and Elizabeth Wijaya
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Cultural Studies ,Philosophy ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Visual Arts and Performing Arts ,Head (linguistics) ,Aesthetics ,Survival of the fittest ,Psychology ,Sentence ,Mount - Abstract
[Love] must keep watch [veiller], it must mount sur-veillance over survival; it must keep watch to organize, work, and militate with a cool head, but it must never cease appealing to the chance of ...
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- 2016
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17. Glaciodynamics of the central sector of the last British–Irish Ice Sheet in Northern England
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David Huddart, Lynda Yorke, Bethan J. Davies, David J.A. Evans, David H. Roberts, Stephen J. Livingstone, Jon Merritt, Colm Ó Cofaigh, and Wishart A. Mitchell
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geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ice stream ,Glacier morphology ,Ice-sheet model ,Oceanography ,Deglaciation ,Wisconsin glaciation ,Ice age ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Physical geography ,Ice divide ,Ice sheet ,Geology - Abstract
The central sector of the last British–Irish Ice Sheet (BIIS) was characterised by considerable complexity, both in terms of its glacial stratigraphy and geomorphological signature. This complexity is reflected by the large number and long history of papers that have attempted to decipher the glaciodynamic history of the region. Despite significant advances in our understanding, reconstructions remain hotly debated and relatively local, thereby hindering attempts to piece together BIIS dynamics. This paper seeks to address these issues by reviewing geomorphological mapping evidence of palimpsest flow signatures and providing an up-to-date stratigraphy of the region. Reconciling geomorphological and sedimentological evidence with relative and absolute dating constraints has allowed us to develop a new six-stage glacial model of ice-flow history and behaviour in the central sector of the last BIIS, with three major phases of glacial advance. This includes: I. Eastwards ice flow through prominent topographic corridors of the north Pennines; II. Cessation of the Stainmore ice flow pathway and northwards migration of the North Irish Sea Basin ice divide; III. Stagnation and retreat of the Tyne Gap Ice Stream; IV. Blackhall Wood–Gosforth Oscillation; V. Deglaciation of the Solway Lowlands; and VI. Scottish Re-advance and subsequent final retreat of ice out of the central sector of the last BIIS. The ice sheet was characterised by considerable dynamism, with flow switches, initiation (and termination) of ice streams, draw-down of ice into marine ice streams, repeated ice-marginal fluctuations and the production of large volumes of meltwater, locally impounded to form ice-dammed glacial lakes. Significantly, we tie this reconstruction to work carried out and models developed for the entire ice sheet. This therefore situates research in the central sector within contemporary understanding of how the last BIIS evolved over time.
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- 2012
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18. Early Hominin Foot Morphology Based on 1.5-Million-Year-Old Footprints from Ileret, Kenya
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Emma Mbua, Silvia Gonzalez, Matthew R. Bennett, Brian G. Richmond, John W.K. Harris, M. Kibunjia, David R. Braun, Christine Omuombo, Anna K. Behrensmeyer, David Huddart, Purity Kiura, and Daniel Olago
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Geologic Sediments ,Pleistocene ,Hominidae ,Theria ,Paleontology ,Eutheria ,Homo ergaster ,Pressure ,Animals ,Body Size ,Humans ,Bipedalism ,Gait ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Foot ,Fossils ,Toes ,biology.organism_classification ,Kenya ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Geography ,Hallux ,Homo erectus ,Locomotion ,Software ,Foot (unit) - Abstract
Hominin footprints offer evidence about gait and foot shape, but their scarcity, combined with an inadequate hominin fossil record, hampers research on the evolution of the human gait. Here, we report hominin footprints in two sedimentary layers dated at 1.51 to 1.53 million years ago (Ma) at Ileret, Kenya, providing the oldest evidence of an essentially modern human–like foot anatomy, with a relatively adducted hallux, medial longitudinal arch, and medial weight transfer before push-off. The size of the Ileret footprints is consistent with stature and body mass estimates for Homo ergaster/erectus , and these prints are also morphologically distinct from the 3.75-million-year-old footprints at Laetoli, Tanzania. The Ileret prints show that by 1.5 Ma, hominins had evolved an essentially modern human foot function and style of bipedal locomotion.
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- 2009
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19. ‘A test of the englacial thrusting hypothesis of 'hummocky' moraine formation: case studies from the northwest Highlands, Scotland’: Comments
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David J. Graham, Matthew R. Bennett, David Huddart, Nicholas G. Midgley, Michael J. Hambrey, and Neil F. Glasser
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Archeology ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Landform ,Moraine ,Geology ,Context (language use) ,Glacier ,Younger Dryas ,Archaeology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Areas of apparently chaotically organised moraine mounds and ridges are commonly associated with British Younger Dryas glaciers, and are also found at many contemporary glacier margins (Boulton & Eyles 1979; Benn 1992; Bennett & Boulton 1993b; Hambrey et al. 1997). Particularly in the British context, such landforms have commonly been referred to as ‘hummocky’ moraine. Whilst this term is undoubtedly an apt description of their morphology, genetic connotations have become attached to it, with some authors using it exclusively to refer to sediment-landform associations associated with wasting ice (e.g. Benn & Evans 1998: p. 483). Work undertaken over the last two decades has demonstrated that British Younger Dryas ‘hummocky’ moraine only rarely formed in association with stagnant ice, and it is now clear that they are polygenetic in origin (e.g. Benn 1992; Bennett & Boulton 1993b). For this reason the non-genetic, and similarly descriptive, ‘moraine-mound complex’ has been proposed for features of undetermined origin (Bennett et al. 1996b), and this term is adopted here.
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- 2007
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20. Paleoindian sites from the Basin of Mexico: Evidence from stratigraphy, tephrochronology and dating
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David Huddart, Gabriela Domínguez-Vázquez, Nicholas J. Felstead, James L. Bischoff, Silvia Gonzalez, and Isabel Israde Alcántara
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GB ,GE ,biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Archaeology ,law.invention ,Paleontology ,Stratigraphy ,law ,Pumice ,Younger Dryas ,Radiocarbon dating ,Tephrochronology ,Tephra ,Geology ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Volcanic ash ,Mammoth - Abstract
We present new data on the stratigraphy, dating and tephrochonology at the most important Paleoindian sites in the Basin of Mexico. These include: a) Peñon Woman III, with the oldest directly radiocarbon dated human remains (10,755 ± 75 BP); b) Tlapacoya, with two human crania dated to just over 10 ka BP; c) Tocuila, an important mammoth site with incorporation of fossils and suggested bone tools within the Upper Toluca Pumice (UTP) lahar (volcanic mudflow). The Tocuila site also includes potential evidence for a layer associated with the Younger Dryas meteorite airburst, with charcoal, iron microspherules, micro-tektites (melted glass) and volcanic ash, dated to 10,800 ± 50 BP and d) the Santa Isabel Iztapan mammoths I and II with lithics of Scottsbluff, Lerma and Angostura types and obsidian prismatic blades but lacking the characteristic fluted Clovis type points normally associated with mammoth kills and butchering and dated after the Pumice with Andesite (PWA) layer between 14,500 BP and 10,900 BP, before the Younger Dryas interval. These results show that these lithic traditions in Central Mexico are older than in the Great Plains of USA. Several tephra markers are recognised in the sites that help to constrain the stratigraphy and dating of the archaeological sequences. However tephra reworking in marginal lake sites is present and has been carefully considered, especially for the PWA tephra.\ud \ud Keywords\ud Late Pleistocene; Mexico; Tephra; Dating; Mammoths; Paleoindians
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- 2015
21. Valsequillo Pleistocene archaeology and dating: ongoing controversy in Central Mexico
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Matthew R. Bennett, David Huddart, and Silvia Gonzalez
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Archeology ,biology ,Pleistocene ,Dating methodologies in archaeology ,biology.organism_classification ,Fission track dating ,Archaeology ,law.invention ,Sequence (geology) ,Paleontology ,law ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Radiocarbon dating ,Stratigraphy (archaeology) ,Relative dating ,Geology ,Mammoth - Abstract
A review of the Valsequillo archaeological finds from the last century is given, such as the cranial remains (Dorenburg and Ostrander skulls), the engraved bone fragments, butchering marks, green bone fractures and flint points and scrapers. However, most of these finds are now missing. Their original dating is reviewed, along with the controversial Uranium Series and Fission Track dates from Hueyatlaco. Further relative dating techniques, such as the use of diatoms and bone assemblages, are discussed. Recently human and animal footprints from the Xalnene Ash at Toluquilla quarry have been described, mapped and dated by optically stimulated luminescence, and there has been new dating of the Valsequillo Gravels by AMS radiocarbon dating of molluscs and electron spin resonance of mammoth bone. The Xalnene Ash dates have proved controversial and the dating issues are reviewed. A suggested dating framework for the Valsequillo sequence in which the archaeological artefacts and footprints are found is given and all the stratigraphy with archaeological remains is considered to be Late Pleistocene in age.
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- 2006
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22. Blended learning? Design and evaluation of a level 3 undergraduate fluvial geomorphology course
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David Huddart and Tim Stott
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Blended learning ,Engineering ,Multimedia ,business.industry ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Fluvial ,business ,computer.software_genre ,computer ,Course (navigation) - Abstract
This report describes the development, use and evaluation of a blended learning approach to delivery of Glacial and Fluvial Processes, a level 3 undergraduate module at Liverpool JMU. Students have...
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- 2005
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23. Involuntary Associations
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David Huddart
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- 2014
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24. Holocene-aged human footprints from the Cuatrocienegas Basin, NE Mexico
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David Huddart, José Concepción Jiménez-López, Nicholas J. Felstead, Silvia Gonzalez, Bruce M. Albert, Arturo Homero González-González, Stephen R. Noble, Dirk L. Hoffmann, Melanie J. Leng, Alistair W. G. Pike, and Sarah E. Metcalfe
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Archeology ,human footprints, tufa, Cuatrociénegas, Palaeoindian, Mexico ,Trackway ,Structural basin ,medicine.disease_cause ,Arid ,Paleontology ,Isotopes of carbon ,Tufa ,Pollen ,Period (geology) ,medicine ,Geology ,Holocene - Abstract
Two sets of well-preserved human footprints have been found in tufa sediments in the Cuatrociénegas Basin, NE Mexico, and here we present their U-series dates of 10.55 ± 0.03 ka and 7.24 ± 0.13 ka. The former are the oldest known footprints in Mexico, although their exact location is unknown, the latter form part of a trackway with eleven in situ human footprints. Oxygen (and to a lesser extent) carbon isotope data from the sediments suggest that the tufa with in situ footprints formed during a transition to a wetter (less arid) period, while pollen evidence indicates the basin floor presence of pecan (Carya) and willow (Salix sp.) before the onset of regional Chihuahuan Desert aridity. These footprints confirm the presence of humans, possibly nomadic hunter–gatherer groups, which persisted until the 18th Century AD.
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- 2014
25. 14. À rythme relativement lent
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David Huddart
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- 2014
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26. Resedimentation of debris on an ice-cored lateral moraine in the high-Arctic (Kongsvegen, Svalbard)
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Matthew R. Bennett, Michael J. Hambrey, David Huddart, and Neil F. Glasser
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geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ice core ,Moraine ,Landform ,Facies ,Alluvial fan ,Deglaciation ,Sediment ,Debris ,Geomorphology ,Geology ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
In ice-cored landform assemblages, the process of resedimentation via sediment-flow is important in determining the morphology and sedimentary facies distribution after the ice core has melted. This paper documents the sediment-flow processes associated with the resedimentation of an ice-cored lateral moraine at Kongsvegen, Svalbard. Decay of the ice-cored lateral moraine is dominated by the development of a sediment-flow fan, which has an ‘hour-glass’ form in plan. The fan comprises a broad source area on the crest of the lateral moraine separated from the fan surface, composed of tessellated flow lobes, by a narrow ice-floored channel system. The principle sedimentary facies associated with this fan include matrix-supported diamictons, laminated silts and fine sands. The evolution of this fan and the likely end-products after complete deglaciation are discussed, and this paper contributes modern analogue data relevant to the interpretation of the Pleistocene landform and sediment record.
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- 2000
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27. The glaciolacustrine landform–sediment assemblage at heinabergsjökull, iceland
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David Huddart, Tom McCormick, and Matthew R. Bennett
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Shore ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Pleistocene ,Rhythmite ,Landform ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Geology ,Ecological succession ,Paleontology ,Shear (geology) ,Aggradation ,Sedimentology ,Geomorphology - Abstract
Landform–sediment assemblages associated with two ice-dammed lakes, one active and one fossil, at Heinabergsjokull in southeast Iceland are described. The current ice-dammed lake (Vatnsdalur) is dominated by a large aggradational terrace, as well as an excellent suite of shorelines. The second fossil ice-dammed lake dates from the Neoglacial maximum of Heinabergsjokull (c. 1887) and drained during the late 1920s. This lake is associated with a suite of shorelines and ice-marginal glaciolacustrine fans. The sedimentology of one of these fans is described. Between 50 and 70% of the sediment succession is dominated by ice-rafted sediment, although rhythmites, matrix-rich gravels, sands and graded sand–silt couplets are also present. A range of intra-formational, soft-sediment deformation structures are present, consistent with liquefaction and deformation associated with loading, current shear, and iceberg calving. The landform–sediment assemblages described from Heinabergsjokull provide important data for the interpretation of Pleistocene ice-dammed lakes.
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- 2000
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28. Glaciofluvial crevasse and conduit fills as indicators of supraglacial dewatering during a surge, Skeiðarárjökull, Iceland
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Matthew R. Bennett, David Huddart, and Richard I. Waller
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010506 paleontology ,Electrical conduit ,Crevasse ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Geotechnical engineering ,Surge ,01 natural sciences ,Dewatering ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
This paper documents the glaciological structures associated with the surge of Skeiðarárjökull, Iceland, in 1991. These structures are interpreted as units of stratified ice, low-angle fractures, vertical and sub-vertical fractures (crevasse traces) and thrusts. The inferred thrusts are debris-rich and, unusually, have both down-glacier and up-glacier dips close to the ice margin. Sediment infills consist of either massive sand or horizontally stratified sand units. The most significant debris-rich structures on the glacier surface, however, are supraglacial crevasse and conduit fills, which contain either massive or horizontally stratified silts, sands and granule-gravels. These sediments infill both vertical fractures (relict crevasses) and englacial conduits. At the stratigraphic base of these sediment fills there is evidence of syn-sedimentary deformation, suggesting that sedimentation occurred during crevasse closure and continued thereafter. We argue that these structures relate to an episode of supraglacial meltwater flow during the 1991 surge, caused by the build-up of subglacial water pressure in a linked-cavity system or some similar distributed drainage system beneath the glacier. The development of this high-level drainage route may have helped regulate basal water pressures and therefore the active phase of the surge. The idea that the supraglacial leakage of subglacial water may have played a role in terminating the surge is explored.
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- 2000
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29. Large-scale Bedrock Displacement by Cirque Glaciers
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Matthew R. Bennett, Neil F. Glasser, and David Huddart
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010506 paleontology ,Global and Planetary Change ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Cirque ,Rock glacier ,Glacier ,Cirque glacier ,Glacier morphology ,01 natural sciences ,Randkluft ,Moraine ,Geomorphology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Terminal moraine ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
Three moraine complexes containing large rafts of fractured-bedrock formed by small cirque glaciers occur in Reindalen, Svalbard. Glaciotectonic landforms cored by rock rafts have been described from mid-latitude ice sheets of Pleistocene age in the past, but we believe this to be the first time large-scale bedrock rafts have been reported from moraines formed by small cirque glaciers. These moraine complexes consist of an imbricate stack of thrust slabs composed of fractured-bedrock and diamicton. Although the exact mechanism are unclear, we suggest that these moraines form by the displacement of subhorizontal strata within the cirque floor to form an initial stack of rock-cored thrust slabs, which subsequently confine the cirque glacier. Subsequent glacier advances, against this "barrier," establishes a strong compressive regime within the glacier snout, which leads to erosion and moraine development. Estimates of the thickness of the rock rafts are used to derive erosion rates, which are an order of magnitude greater than those previously reported for arctic regions.
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- 1999
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30. Debris entrainment and transfer in polythermal valley glaciers
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Michael J. Hambreky, Matthew R. Bennett, Julian A. Dowdeswell, Neil F. Glasser, and David Huddart
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010506 paleontology ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,01 natural sciences ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
Modes of debris entrainment and subsequent transfer in seven “normal” and five surge-type glaciers in Svalbard (76–79° N) are outlined in the context of the structural evolution of a glacier as the ice deforms during flow. Three main modes of entrainment and transfer are inferred from structural and sedimentological observations: (i) The incorporation of angular rockfall material within the stratified sequence of snow/firn/superimposed ice. This debris takes an englacial path through the glacier, becoming folded. At the margins and at the boundaries of flow units the stratified ice including debris is strongly folded, so that near the snout the debris emerges at the surface on the hinges and limbs of the folds, producing medial moraines which merge towards the snout. The resulting lines of debris are transmitted to the proglacial area in the form of regular trains of angular debris. (ii) Incorporation of debris of both supraglacial and basal character within longitudinal foliation. This is particularly evident at the surface of the glacier at the margins or at flow unit boundaries. It can be sometimes demonstrated that foliation is a product of strong folding, since it usually has an axial planar relationship with folded stratification. Foliation-parallel debris thus represents a more advanced stage of deformation than in (i). Although the presence of basal debris is problematic, it is proposed that this material is tightly folded ice derived from the bed in the manner of disharmonie folding. The readily deformed subglacial sediment or bedrock surface represents the plane of décollement. (iii) Thrusting, whereby debris-rich basal ice (including regelation ice) and subglacial sediments are uplifted into an englacial position, sometimes emerging at the ice surface. This material is much more variable in character than that derived from rockfalls, and reflects the substrate lithologies; diamicton with striated clasts and sandy gravels are the most common facies represented. Thrusting is a dynamic process, and in polythermal glaciers is probably linked mainly to the transition from sliding to frozen bed conditions. It is not therefore a solely ice-marginal or proglacial process.
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- 1999
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31. Origin of well-rounded gravels in glacial deposits from Br�ggerhalv�ya, northwest Spitsbergen: potential problems caused by sediment reworking in the glacial environment
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Neil F. Glasser, Matthew R. Bennett, Kevin Crawford, David Huddart, and Michael J. Hambrey
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geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Sediment ,Glacier ,Oceanography ,Roundness (geology) ,Diamicton ,Paleontology ,Interglacial ,Outwash plain ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Environmental Chemistry ,Glacial period ,Geomorphology ,Geology ,Sea level ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Well-rounded gravels are described from moraine-mound complexes, diamicton forefields and modern englacial thrusts at the margins of four glaciers on the northern side of Broggerhalvoya, northwest Spitsbergen. Their shape charcteristics are compared with modern and fossil glacigenic, modern beach and Early Weichselian beach gravels from this peninsula. The best discriminators of the well-rounded gravels have been found to be the percentage-frequency roundness histograms, the roundness mid-point and roundness range diagrams and the sphericity-roundness plots. It is concluded that the gravels have been derived by englacial thrusting from Early Weichselian or last interglacial beaches in the inner parts of the fjord and in the low level cirques when sea level reached at least 50m a.s.l. and deposited the beach gravels. The discrimination between gravel in basal diamictons, proglacial outwash and modern beaches is difficult as the reworking has resulted in little particle shape change. The potential major problem caused by reworking in the glacial environment is emphasised, especially when clast shape comparisons from modern environments to older sediments are used.
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- 1998
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32. Lithological and Structural Controls on the Surface Wear Characteristics of Glaciated Metamorphic Bedrock Surfaces: Ossian Sarsfjellet, Svalbard
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Kevin Crawford, Matthew R. Bennett, Neil F. Glasser, David Huddart, and Michael J. Hambrey
- Subjects
geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Lithology ,Landform ,Ice stream ,Bedrock ,Metamorphic rock ,Schist ,Geochemistry ,Geology ,Abrasion (geology) ,Glacial period ,Geomorphology - Abstract
Although there is an established relationship between geological structure and the morphology of certain glacial erosional landforms, the role of lithology is less clear. This is particularly true of the surface wear characteristics of glaciated bedrock. In order to examine this relationship, the surface wear characteristics of eight recently deglaciated metamorphic bedrock slabs in the Kongsfjorden area of Svalbard were mapped and recorded using detailed “micro‐maps.” Features recorded included lee‐side fracture surfaces, lee‐side cavities, and the location and depth of open joints and quartz veins. On schist, glacial erosion is favored by situations where ice movement is parallel to the trend of the bedrock foliation. In these situations, cavities may be elongated in the direction of ice flow. On more homogeneous lithologies such as marble, cavity formation is suppressed and more uniform glacially abraded rock surfaces develop. On all the metamorphic rocks examined, glacial abrasion is favored in situat...
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The structural glaciology of Kongsvegen, Svalbard, and its role in landform genesis
- Author
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Kevin Crawford, Neil F. Glasser, Matthew R. Bennett, Michael J. Hambrey, and David Huddart
- Subjects
geography ,010506 paleontology ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Pleistocene ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Landform ,Stratification (water) ,Glacier ,Fold (geology) ,Debris ,01 natural sciences ,Glaciology ,Crevasse ,Geomorphology ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
Mapping of the structural glaciology of Kongsvegen, Svalbard, reveals evidence for four main deformational structures. These are stratification, longitudinal foliation, thrusts and crevasse traces. These structures are considered in terms of their contribution to debris entrainment, transport and subsequent landform development. Stratification is associated with small amounts of supraglacial debris that has been folded with flow-parallel axes; longitudinal foliation in places incorporates basal glacial sediments along folds with flow-parallel axes; and thrusts transport basal debris to the glacier surface. Crevasse traces are not significant in terms of debris entrainment. The entrainment of basal debris along longitudinal foliation is not a universally recognised process. At Kongsvegen this process is attributed to the development of a transposition foliation, in combination with incorporation of debris-rich basal ice or soft basal sediment in the fold complex. Mapping of the landforms in the proglacial area shows that debris incorporated along longitudinal foliation is released as “foliation-parallel ridges” and that transverse ridges mark debris-bearing thrusts. The role of longitudinal foliation in landform development has never been documented in this manner. Although the preservation potential of such ridges may be limited, recognition of foliation-parallel ridges in the Pleistocene landform record has important implications for the interpretation of the dynamics of former ire masses.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Moraine Development at the High-Arctic Valley Glacier Pedersenbreen, Svalbard
- Author
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Michael J. Hambrey, Matthew R. Bennett, David Huddart, and Jean-François Ghienne
- Subjects
010506 paleontology ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Tidewater glacier cycle ,Geology ,Cirque glacier ,Glacier morphology ,01 natural sciences ,Paleontology ,Glacier mass balance ,Arctic ,Moraine ,Geomorphology ,Terminal moraine ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Ice rafting - Abstract
The formation of a moraine mound (hummocky moraine) complex at the Neoglacial limit of Pedersenbreen, Svalbard is discussed. The moraine mounds are composed for the most part of sheared basal diami...
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Dating of the Valsequillo volcanic deposits: resolution of an ongoing archaeological controversy in Central Mexico
- Author
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David Huddart, Darren F. Mark, Harald Böhnel, and Silvia Gonzalez
- Subjects
Basalt ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Volcanic Eruptions ,Ethnically diverse ,Lapilli ,Archaeology ,Archaeological evidence ,Mass Spectrometry ,Volcano ,Isotopes ,Anthropology ,Geochronology ,Phenocryst ,Argon ,Mexico ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Geology - Abstract
The timing and origin of the earliest human colonization of the Americas has been the subject of great debate over the last 100 years and is still a matter of heated discussion today (Renne et al., 2005; Gonzalez et al., 2006a). It is widely accepted that the Clovis culture was the first to migrate into the New World at 13.1 ka (Waters and Stafford, 2007). However, archaeological evidence, in the form of stone tools, linguistics, craniometrics and genetics all suggest that the first Americans were ethnically diverse, and a few sites dated to 15e16 ka challenge the ‘Clovis First’ model (Goebel et al., 2008). Perhaps the most spectacular challenge to the ‘Clovis First’ model was the reported presence of human footprints within a basaltic ash (Xalnene Ash, Valsequillo Basin, Central Mexico), dated to 38.04 8.57 ka using optically stimulated luminescence (OSL; Gonzalez et al., 2006a). However, Renne et al. (2005) challenged the validity of the footprints by dating lapilli from the Xalnene Ash using 40Ar/39Ar and reported an age of 1.30 0.03 Ma (2s). Renne et al. (2005) also reported a reversed palaeomagnetic polarity for the ash, consistent with deposition during chron C1r.2r (Cande and Kent, 1995). Such antiquity casts considerable doubt on the interpretation of the impressions as human footprints. Gonzalez et al. (2006b) questioned the 40Ar/39Ar age and highlighted the heterogeneous nature of the lapilli as a potential problem for 40Ar/39Ar geochronology. The lapilli contain phenocrysts and include xenocrysts. Olivine phenocrysts can be contaminated with excess Ar (ArE; McDougall et al., 1969) and hence the dating of
- Published
- 2009
36. Post-colonial Piracy: Anxiety and Interdisciplinarity
- Author
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David Huddart
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Post colonial ,medicine ,Anxiety ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Social psychology - Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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37. Earliest humans in the Americas: new evidence from México
- Author
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Silvia Gonzalez, Pompa y Padilla Ja, James C. Ohman, Robert E. M. Hedges, Jiménez-López Jc, Alan Turner, and David Huddart
- Subjects
Time Factors ,Fossils ,Skull ,Emigration and Immigration ,South America ,Biological Evolution ,Geography ,Anthropology ,North America ,Ethnology ,Humans ,Carbon Radioisotopes ,Mexico ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 2003
38. Ice-marginal characteristics of Fridtjovbreen (Svalbard) during its recent surge
- Author
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David Huddart, Neil F. Glasser, and Matthew R. Bennett
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Landform ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Front (oceanography) ,Tidewater glacier cycle ,Glacier ,Glacier morphology ,Oceanography ,01 natural sciences ,Paleontology ,Moraine ,Cliff ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Environmental Chemistry ,Surge ,Geomorphology ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Fridtjovbreen is an actively surging tidewater glacier in western Spitsbergen, Svalbard. This paper presents observations made at the western flank of the glacier in July 1997, when the glacier front was still advancing rapidly and was characterised by steep lateral ice cliffs. The geomorphological consequences of the surge include the formation of push moraines from toppled ice blocks along this ice cliff and the development of debris-rich thrusts. There is also evidence of glaciotectonic deformation within deformed debris-rich thrusts. Thrusts are restricted to the lateral margins and are not seen in the terminal calving cliff. On its western flank, Fridtjovbreen is over-riding Sagabreen, a small-tributary glacier. Large facies variations in this area are a result of recycling by Fridtjovbreen of material originally transported as medial moraines on Sagabreen. There are few observations of landform development at actively surging glaciers in Svalbard. The Fridtjovbreen descriptions provide documentation for post-surge landform development. More observations are required at the margins of actively surging glaciers to determine how representative Fridtjovbreen is of a surge event.
- Published
- 1998
39. Origin of well-rounded gravels in glacial deposits from Brøggerhalvøya, northwest Spitsbergen: potential problems caused by sediment reworking in the glacial environment
- Author
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David Huddart, Matthew R. Bennett, Michael J. Hambrey, Neil F. Glasser, and Kevin Crawford
- Subjects
Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Environmental Chemistry ,Oceanography ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Well-rounded gravels are described from moraine-mound complexes, diamicton forefields and modern englacial thrusts at the margins of four glaciers on the northern side of Brøggerhalvøya, northwest Spitsbergen. Their shape charcteristics are compared with modern and fossil glacigenic, modern beach and Early Weichselian beach gravels from this peninsula. The best discriminators of the well-rounded gravels have been found to be the percentage-frequency roundness histograms, the roundness mid-point and roundness range diagrams and the sphericity-roundness plots. It is concluded that the gravels have been derived by englacial thrusting from Early Weichselian or last interglacial beaches in the inner parts of the fjord and in the low level cirques when sea level reached at least 50m a.s.l. and deposited the beach gravels. The discrimination between gravel in basal diamictons, proglacial outwash and modern beaches is difficult as the reworking has resulted in little particle shape change. The potential major problem caused by reworking in the glacial environment is emphasised, especially when clast shape comparisons from modern environments to older sediments are used.
- Published
- 1998
40. Transnational Illiteracy
- Author
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David Huddart and Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak
- Subjects
Literature and Literary Theory ,Gender studies ,Sociology ,Social science ,Functional illiteracy - Published
- 2000
- Full Text
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41. The Origin of Ice Marginal Terraces and Contact Ridges of East Kangerdluarssuk Glacier, SW Greenland
- Author
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David Huddart and Hal Lister
- Subjects
010506 paleontology ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Ice stream ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Ice calving ,Glacier ,Geology ,Structural basin ,Glacier morphology ,01 natural sciences ,Stratigraphy ,Glacial period ,Ice sheet ,Geomorphology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
The form and stratigraphy of dominat pro glacial deposits is described and analysed for three distinct environments at a lobe of the inland ice: (i) an ice floored basin with terraced sediments at ...
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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