『Note from the Editors
Brian Harland was for many years an editor of this journal. He
was also a seminal figure in the origins of the current ‘snowball
Earth’ debate, having recognized in 1964 the significance of coupling
emerging palaeomagnetic data on palaeolatitude with his interpretations
of diamictites. Harland worked extensively in the Arctic and knew
well many of the workers involved in the arguments surrounding
the origin of diamictites. He thus had a unique perspective on
the evidence and the disputes surrounding it. This was his last
paper but he was not able to complete it before he died. However,
with the help of Professor Ian Fairchild to whom we are indebted,
the editors have lightly revised this work which is presented
as the personal view of one of the key figures with a very broad
stratigraphic appreciation of the problems of ‘snowball Earth’.
Abstract
Records of Precambrian glaciation onwards from the late nineteenth
century led to the concept of one or more major ice ages. This
concept was becoming well advanced by the mid 1930s, particularly
through the compilation of Kulling in 1934. Even so tillite stratigraphy
shows that glaciation was exceptional rather than typical of earth
history. Some Proterozoic tillites, sandwiched between warm marine
facies, indicate low, even equatorial palaeolatitudes as determined
magnetically, and more recently led to ideas of a snow- and ice-covered
‘snowball Earth’. However, interbedded non-glacial facies as well
as thick tillite successions requiring abundant snowball both
militate against the hypothesis of extreme prolonged freezing
temperatures referred to here as an ‘iceball Earth’ in which all
oceans and seas were sealed in continuous ice cover. On the other
hand tropical environments were interrupted by glaciation several
times in the Proterozoic, something that did not recur in the
Phanerozoic. The term ‘snowball Earth’ is consistent with the
established view of extremely widespread Proterozoic glaciation,
but the ‘iceball Earth’ version of this is not compatible with
the geological record.
Keywords: snowball Earth; iceball Earth; glaciation; tillite』
1. Introduction
2. Origins of the hypothesis of global glaciation
2.a. British Isles
2.b. Norway
2.c. East Greenland
2.d. Svalbard
2.e. Australia
2.f. Africa
2.g. China
2.h. Russia
2.i. North America
2.j. Kulling's early synthesis
3. Discussion
3.a. Tillite recognition and evidence of glaciation
3.b. Sedimentological inconsistencies with the iceball
3.c. Timing of glaciation and the global nature of Proterozoic
glaciation
3.d. Palaeolatitude of tillites and continental reconstructions
3.e. Correlation of Precambrian tillites
3.f. Causes of glaciation
Acknowledgements
References