206:
complex. Geologists recognize that hummocks may be polygenetic and form by a combination of forces that are yet to be well understood. Recent research on cryogenic hummocks has focused on their role as environmental indicators. Because hummocks can both form and disintegrate rapidly (well within a human lifetime) they are an ideal landform to monitor for medium range environmental change. There are several explanations of earth hummock formation. Hummocks may form as a result of
84:
40:
354:
286:. The blocks simply break off the mountain and slide down, completely intact, identifiable because they differ from the surrounding landscape. The volume and height of hummocks is mostly dependent on their location; the closer to the source region, the larger they become. The bottom layer of a debris avalanche deposit is the fine-grained matrix which forms due to the shear at the base of the large, turbulent moving mass.
148:
72:
the hummocks is dependent on their position in the initial mass. As this mass spreads, the hummocks further modify to break up or merge to form larger structures. It is difficult to make generalizations about hummocks because of the diversity in their morphology and sedimentology. An extremely irregular surface may be called
274:
Debris avalanches are caused by sudden collapses of large volumes of rock from the flanks of mountains, especially volcanoes. These events are fast-moving, gravity-driven currents of saturated debris that do not necessarily include juvenile material. Debris avalanche deposits are characterized by the
71:
to the final formation, hummocks can be characterized by their evolution, spatial distribution, and internal structure. As the movement of landslide begins, the extension faulting results in formation of hummocks with smaller ones at the front of the landslide and larger ones in the back. The size of
205:
and seasonally frozen ground. They usually develop in fine-grained soils with light to moderate vegetation in areas of low relief where there is adequate moisture to fuel cryogenic processes. Cryogenic earth hummocks appear in a variety of cold-ground environments, making the story of their genesis
218:
Cryogenic hummocks are found covered in vegetation in Taiga and Boreal forests. They are also known as active hummocks due to the freeze and thaw cycle of the ice lenses that continually occur within the organic layers of their mounds. The freezing of ice lenses is what causes the mounds to rise.
265:
hummock genesis. Irregularities in preexisting ground conditions (differences in grain size, ground temperature, moisture conditions of vegetation) cause surface downwards freezing during the winter to spread unevenly. Encroaching frost exerted increasing pressure on the adjacent unfrozen soil.
252:
processes whereby warmer soil and water at depth expands, becomes less dense and rises, while gravity forces denser soil downwards. Circulation has also been explained as driven solely by density of soil material and not temperature induced density changes.
484:
Reubi, O, Ross, P. S., & White, J.D.L. (2005). Debris
Avalanche deposits associated with large igneous province volcanism: An example from the Mawson Formation, central Allan Hills, Antarctica. Geological Society of America Bulletin. p. 117,
266:
Trapped between the freezing surface soils and the buried permafrost layer the soil material is forced upwards into hummocks. While this is currently the most commonly accepted hypothesis, there is still only limited evidence of this happening.
79:
An ice hummock is a boss or rounded knoll of ice rising above the general level of an ice-field. Hummocky ice is caused by slow and unequal pressure in the main body of the packed ice, and by unequal structure and temperature at a later period.
275:
debris-avalanche block (hummocks) and the debris-avalanche matrix. Debris avalanches are diagnosed for landscapes where the volcano has an amphitheater at the source with hummocky terrain downhill. In some cases, such as
243:
Hummock excavation normally reveals a disturbed soil profile, often with irregular streaks of organic matter or other colorations suggesting fluidity at some point in the past. The disturbance, a form of
131:
are mounds typically initiated as fallen trunks or branches covered with moss and rising above the swamp floor. The low-lying areas between hummocks are called hollows. A related term, used in the
235:, the primary make up of these mounds is volcanic ash. A clear display of layers of volcanic ash is observed within these Thufurs amidst other organic matter.
227:
Thufurs are small sized hummocks typically found in climates like that of
Iceland. They prefer areas with seasonal freezing and maritime climates. While their
322:
Grab, Stefan. (2003). "Aspects of the geomorphology, genesis and environmental significance of earth hummocks (thufur, pounus): miniature cryogenic mounds."
436:
Davis, Neil. (2001). Permafrost: A Guide to Frozen Ground in
Transition. Fairbanks, Alaska: University of Alaska Press. p. 133, 137-40, 146, 175-76.
210:
migrating to the surface through frost push and pull mechanisms. As the clasts rise they push up on the ground above forming bulging mounds.
374:
342:
Willams, Peter J. and
Michael W. Smith. (1989). The Frozen Earth: Fundamentals of Geocryology. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge UP, p. 149-163.
369:
302:
Bates, Robert L. and Julia A. Jackson, ed. (1984). "hummock." Dictionary of
Geological Terms, 3rd Ed. New York: Anchor Books. p. 241.
63:
above ground. They are typically less than 15 meters (50 ft) in height and tend to appear in groups or fields. Large landslide
418:
279:
in
California, the amphitheater has been filled in by later volcanic activity and all that remains are the hummocks.
248:, often extends to a depth roughly equal to the hummock’s height. This has been explained by some as the result of
96:
Hummocks in the shape of low ridges of drier peat moss typically form part of the structure of certain types of
324:
67:
that typically occur in volcanic areas are responsible for formation of hummocks. From the initiation of the
132:
471:
390:
31:
17:
531:
458:
359:
One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the
219:
When the ice lenses thaw during a forest fire, the mounds collapse until they freeze again.
8:
512:
166:
410:
136:
499:
Francis, P, & Oppenheimer, C (2003). Volcanoes. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
402:
182:
525:
365:
360:
245:
515:, Houghton, B.F (eds), Encyclopedia of Volcanoes. San Diego: Academic Press.
256:
414:
283:
276:
207:
198:
406:
282:
Debris avalanche blocks are identifiable because they keep their internal
83:
152:
101:
378:. Vol. 13 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 888.
262:
249:
202:
161:
earth hummocks go by various names; in North
America they are known as
113:
97:
39:
391:"Variation in wetland seed banks across a tidal freshwater landscape"
158:
109:
105:
68:
64:
511:
Ui, T., Takarada, S., Yoshimoto, M., (2000). Debris
Avalanches. In
228:
181:) is also used to describe them in Greenland and Iceland, and the
147:
56:
48:
449:
Harris, Stuart (5 February 2022). "Cryogenic Earth
Hummocks".
117:
60:
232:
257:
Differential frost heave (cryostatic pressure hypothesis)
116:. The hummocks alternate with shallow wet depressions or
389:
Peterson, Jessica E.; Baldwin, Andrew H. (August 2004).
269:
213:
201:. These cold climate landforms appear in regions of
523:
261:This is the most widely accepted explanation of
388:
176:
170:
192:
186:
142:
495:
493:
491:
338:
336:
334:
364:
146:
82:
38:
432:
430:
428:
238:
14:
524:
488:
448:
331:
318:
316:
314:
312:
310:
308:
507:
505:
270:Hummocks created by debris avalanches
444:
442:
425:
296:
214:Oscillating cryogenic earth hummocks
453:: 463–473 – via researchgate.
305:
24:
502:
25:
543:
439:
421:from the original on 31 May 2016.
123:
27:Small knoll or mound above ground
352:
91:
478:
382:
345:
325:Progress in Physical Geography
13:
1:
289:
151:Cryogenic earth hummocks on
7:
10:
548:
395:American Journal of Botany
222:
133:Southeastern United States
29:
43:Earth hummocks in England
143:Cryogenic earth hummocks
32:Hummock (disambiguation)
375:Encyclopædia Britannica
466:Cite journal requires
193:
187:
177:
171:
155:
88:
44:
407:10.3732/ajb.91.8.1251
150:
86:
42:
239:Cellular circulation
30:For other uses, see
328:29, 2. p. 139-155.
156:
89:
45:
16:(Redirected from
539:
516:
509:
500:
497:
486:
482:
476:
475:
469:
464:
462:
454:
446:
437:
434:
423:
422:
401:(8): 1251–1259.
386:
380:
379:
358:
356:
355:
349:
343:
340:
329:
320:
303:
300:
196:
190:
180:
174:
21:
547:
546:
542:
541:
540:
538:
537:
536:
522:
521:
520:
519:
510:
503:
498:
489:
483:
479:
467:
465:
456:
455:
447:
440:
435:
426:
387:
383:
368:, ed. (1911). "
353:
351:
350:
346:
341:
332:
321:
306:
301:
297:
292:
272:
259:
241:
225:
216:
145:
126:
94:
35:
28:
23:
22:
15:
12:
11:
5:
545:
535:
534:
532:Soil landforms
518:
517:
513:Sigurdsson, H.
501:
487:
477:
468:|journal=
438:
424:
381:
366:Chisholm, Hugh
344:
330:
304:
294:
293:
291:
288:
271:
268:
258:
255:
240:
237:
224:
221:
215:
212:
163:earth hummocks
144:
141:
129:Swamp hummocks
125:
124:Swamp hummocks
122:
93:
90:
26:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
544:
533:
530:
529:
527:
514:
508:
506:
496:
494:
492:
481:
473:
460:
452:
445:
443:
433:
431:
429:
420:
416:
412:
408:
404:
400:
396:
392:
385:
377:
376:
371:
367:
362:
361:public domain
348:
339:
337:
335:
327:
326:
319:
317:
315:
313:
311:
309:
299:
295:
287:
285:
280:
278:
267:
264:
254:
251:
247:
246:cryoturbation
236:
234:
230:
220:
211:
209:
204:
200:
195:
189:
184:
179:
173:
168:
164:
160:
154:
149:
140:
138:
134:
130:
121:
119:
115:
111:
107:
103:
99:
85:
81:
77:
75:
70:
66:
62:
58:
54:
50:
41:
37:
33:
19:
480:
459:cite journal
450:
398:
394:
384:
373:
347:
323:
298:
284:stratigraphy
281:
277:Mount Shasta
273:
260:
242:
226:
217:
199:Fennoscandia
178:þúfur/thúfur
162:
157:
128:
127:
95:
92:Bog hummocks
87:Ice hummocks
78:
73:
52:
46:
36:
231:is rich in
153:Mount Kenya
55:is a small
485:1612-1627.
290:References
250:convection
203:permafrost
172:þúfa/thúfa
114:string bog
100:, such as
98:raised bog
65:avalanches
263:cryogenic
167:Icelandic
159:Cryogenic
69:landslide
526:Category
419:Archived
415:21653482
229:sediment
74:hummocky
18:Hummocky
370:Hummock
363::
223:Thufurs
183:Finnish
137:hammock
102:plateau
53:hummock
49:geology
413:
357:
208:clasts
194:pounut
165:; the
135:, is "
118:flarks
197:) in
191:(pl.
188:pounu
185:term
175:(pl.
169:term
110:palsa
106:kermi
61:mound
57:knoll
472:help
411:PMID
233:silt
51:, a
403:doi
372:".
139:".
112:or
59:or
47:In
528::
504:^
490:^
463::
461:}}
457:{{
451:13
441:^
427:^
417:.
409:.
399:91
397:.
393:.
333:^
307:^
120:.
108:,
104:,
76:.
474:)
470:(
405::
34:.
20:)
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.