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  • The Late Paleozoic Ice Age (LPIA; 362 to 256 Ma) left a record in the Gondwanan sedimentary basins as glacial successions and ice-carved features. In the Paraná Basin, the glaciation is recorded in the Itararé Group and on its basal unconformity that contains micro to mega scale erosive features. Diamictites and glacial erosive landforms such as striated surfaces have been used to reconstruct past glacial dynamics as well as to define ice kinematics and ice-spreading centers. However, soft-sediment striated surfaces generated by scouring of iceberg keels are also common in the Itararé Group strata as well as diamictites generated by nonglacial processes. Assemblages of erosive landforms left behind by Carboniferous glaciers in southern Brazil are evidence for different glaciation scenarios. In the Paraná State, flat-based, unconfined ice lobes advanced northward over Devonian sandstones of the Furnas Formation. In the Santa Catarina state, the glacial advances are characterized by an irregular topography on igneous and metamorphic basement, probably a result of advancing ice streams. In Rio Grande do Sul, an assemblage of paleovalleys is interpreted as the product of glaciation; however, these valleys could have been generated by tectonism and not by glacial erosion. The complex glacial events that took place in southern Brazil are being better understood due to detailed studies on the record left behind by Carboniferous glaciers. © 2021 Universidade Federal do Parana. All rights reserved.

  • The stratigraphic architecture of fjords is complicated due to the delicate interplay between ice dynamics, sediment supply, relative sea-level fluctuations and slope failures. Glaciogenic sediment is prone to failure and to be carried downslope to the fjord floor through the entire spectrum of mass movements and subaqueous density flows, as the unstable paraglacial submarine landscape moves towards stability. Palaeofjords formed by Gondwanan glaciers during the late Palaeozoic Ice Age contain a compelling record of gravitational resedimentation in fjord depositional systems. This paper showcases the geomorphology and depositional history of a glacial cycle in the Orutanda fjord in north-western Namibia as an example of an overdeepened fjord basin fill dominated by products of subaqueous gravitational processes. During glaciation, the Orutanda glacier carved a 20 km long by 3.7 km wide glacial trough that embodies an overdeepened basin. Ice thickness during terminal glacial occupation of the fjord is estimated to had been up to 200 m based on the fjord geomorphology. The progressive retreat of the tidewater glacier, concomitant with marine flooding, increased accommodation space in the overdeepened basin during deglaciation. During this stage, proglacial sedimentation through iceberg rafting and settling of turbid plumes was outpaced by intense paraglacial downslope resedimentation of glacially-transported debris. Successive failures from the fjord walls and downslope resedimentation resulted in coalescing debrite–turbidite lobes on the fjord floor. Slide deposits, composed entirely of deformed debrites and turbidites, indicate that these resedimented facies were prone to renewed mass wasting. As the Orutanda glacier melted, the fjord experienced the axial progradation of a fjord-head delta registered only by turbidites and slide deposits derived from its collapse. The Orutanda fjord sheds light on the relevance of paraglacial mass wasting in overprinting glaciogenic deposits. This insight is key to understanding the role of glaciers versus non-glacial processes in producing the glacial deep-time record.

Last update from database: 3/25/26, 6:13 PM (UTC)

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