2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2004.12.003
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Fresh arguments against the Shaw megaflood hypothesis. A reply to comments by David Sharpe on “Paleohydraulics of the last outburst flood from glacial Lake Agassiz and the 8200 BP cold event”

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Cited by 61 publications
(40 citation statements)
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“…This compares well with modeling investigations and inferences made from deep borehole temperatures (Rolandone et al, 2003). Where warm based, rates of basal melting are estimated at 5-7 mm a À1 due to basal melting alone [Kump and Alley, 1994;Breemer et al, 2002;Clarke et al, 2005]. This value was probably exceeded in ice marginal areas where there was surface melt supply to the bed and a greater degree of frictional melting associated with ice streaming [Breemer et al, 2002].…”
Section: Thermal Conditions At the Ice Sheet Basesupporting
confidence: 72%
“…This compares well with modeling investigations and inferences made from deep borehole temperatures (Rolandone et al, 2003). Where warm based, rates of basal melting are estimated at 5-7 mm a À1 due to basal melting alone [Kump and Alley, 1994;Breemer et al, 2002;Clarke et al, 2005]. This value was probably exceeded in ice marginal areas where there was surface melt supply to the bed and a greater degree of frictional melting associated with ice streaming [Breemer et al, 2002].…”
Section: Thermal Conditions At the Ice Sheet Basesupporting
confidence: 72%
“…This interpretation has been the subject of much debate (e.g., Benn and Evans, 2006;Evans, 2010;Shaw, 2010a, b;Evans et al, 2013;Shaw, 2013), which is yet to be fully resolved, not least because ice streams are typically associated with abundant subglacial meltwater that helps lubricate their flow. However, questions remain, for example, regarding the sources and volume of water required to feed putative mega-flood tracks (Clarke et al, 2005). Thus, spatiallyconfined fast-flowing ice (ice streaming) is the simpler interpretation at present and one which we adopt in this paper.…”
Section: O a L E S C E N C E W I T H T H E C O R D I L L E R A N I Cmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…drumlins, ribbed moraine) to delineate flood pathways is more controversial (e.g. Clarke et al 2005). The pattern of tunnel valleys, subglacial meltwater channels, and other meltwaterrelated features, are useful for constraining palaeo-subglacial lakes and elucidating how they interact with the subglacial hydrological system.…”
Section: Subglacial Hydrology Of Ice Sheets and Subglacial Lakesmentioning
confidence: 99%