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Kame (disambiguation)

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A kame , or knob , is a glacial landform , an irregularly shaped hill or mound composed of sand , gravel and till that accumulates in a depression on a retreating glacier , and is then deposited on the land surface with further melting of the glacier. Kames are often associated with kettles , and this is referred to as kame and kettle or knob and kettle topography . The word kame is a variant of comb ( kame , or kaim is the Old Scottish word meaning 'comb'), which has the meaning "crest" among others. The geological term was introduced by Thomas Jamieson in 1874.

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4-555: A kame is a geomorphological feature. Kame or KAME may also refer to: Kame According to White, "kames were formed by meltwater which deposited more or less washed material at irregular places in and along melting ice. At places the material is very well washed and stratified; at others it is more poorly washed, with inclusions of till masses that fell from ice but were covered before they were completely washed. Kame gravels thus tend to be variable and range from fine to coarse grained and even to cobbly and boulder." With

8-488: Is not originally shaped by meltwater, but by the ice itself and has a quite regular shape. It occurs in fine-grained material, such as clay or shale , not in sands and gravels. And drumlins usually have concentric layers of material, as the ice successively plasters new layers in its movement. Kames are not normally located in proximity to one another, however in Edmonton , Alberta, numerous kames are found nearby, forming

12-415: The ice and the adjacent valley side. These kame terraces tend to look like long, flat benches, with many pits on the surface made by kettles. They tend to slope downvalley with gradients similar to the glacier surface along which they formed, and can sometimes be found paired on opposite sides of a valley. Kames are sometimes compared to drumlins , but their formation is distinctively different. A drumlin

16-419: The melting of the glacier, streams carry sediment to glacial lakes , building kame deltas on top of the ice . However, with the continuous melting of the glacier, the kame delta eventually collapses onto the land surface, furthering the "kame and kettle" topography. Kame terraces are frequently found along the side of a glacial valley and are stratified deposits of meltwater streams flowing between

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