Character and distribution of exposed glaciodeltaic deposits off outer Cape Cod, Massachusetts, and their effects on hydrogeology and benthic habitats
Character and distribution of exposed glaciodeltaic deposits off outer Cape Cod, Massachusetts, and their effects on hydrogeology and benthic habitats
Date
2005-05-15
Authors
Poppe, Lawrence J.
Foster, David S.
Danforth, William W.
Foster, David S.
Danforth, William W.
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Abstract
Sea-bed outcrops of glaciodeltaic sediments were identified in four places east of Cape
Cod, Massachusetts during seismic-reflection, multibeam bathymetric and backscatter, bottom
photographic, and sediment sampling surveys. These strata record coarser-grained ice-proximal
glaciofluvial topset to finer-grained distal glaciolacustrine bottomset deposition within deltaic
systems that prograded southwestward into glacial lakes from the South Channel lobe about 18 ka
B.P. These beds are important because they (1) influence the outer Cape's hydrogeologic
framework, and (2) provide relatively stable, locally rough habitats within an area of seafloor
dominated by mobile sand and gravelly sediment, and benefit the benthic fauna by providing
shelter and a substrate amenable to burrow construction.
Description
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2006. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Springer for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geo-Marine Letters 26 (2006): 51-57, doi:10.1007/s00367-005-0015-x.