TESTING THE EFFECTIVNESS OF GLACIER EROSION BY CHANNEL ANALYSES: NORTHEASTERN OHIO, USA
Through GIS analysis of borehole, surficial Digital Elevation Models (DEMs), structure and stratigraphy data from the area, >30 channels composing three independent morphologies have been identified: Type A) Two large >50 kilometers long by >1 kilometer wide by >100 meters deep (>50 km x >1 km x >100 m), linear channels with flat long profiles and steep sides that flank the cuesta; Type B) Four medium (<50 km x ~0.5 km x <100 m) concave-north, curvilinear channels that cross the cuesta and modern drainage divides; and Type C) >25 smaller (~5 km x 0.3 km x 30 m) complex and orthogonally cross-cutting channels incised atop the cuesta. After evaluating each morphology type against established channel origins, it is suggested that Type A and B channels are glacially modified fluvial channels and Type C channels are predominately glacier derived. An analysis of channel thalweg elevations is interpreted as a result of multiple stages and/or intensities of glacial modification. These disparities also suggest that a glacier's ability to efface the landscape is limited on a cuesta; conversely, the adjacent lowlands (e.g., Grand River Low Plateau) suggest spatial differences in a glacier's erosive ability.