Artigo Revisado por pares

Periglacial Frost-Thaw Basins in New Jersey

1953; University of Chicago Press; Volume: 61; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1086/626061

ISSN

1537-5269

Autores

Peter E. Wolfe,

Tópico(s)

Peatlands and Wetlands Ecology

Resumo

Basins with interior drainage are of widespread occurrence on the New Jersey Coastal Plain. They are oval, irregular, shallow depressions, without rims or orientation, and occur on all lithologic formations. The presence of extensive frost-wedge fillings, involutions, festoons, and other frost structures indicate that the area was exposed to a colder climate than that of today. The origin of the basins is attributed to frost-thaw action and subsidence in the periglacial zone when the Continental Ice Sheet stood just north of the Coastal Plain in Pleistocene time and is likened to the subsidence thaw basins being formed in arctic regions today.

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