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Home > Explore! > Surficial Geology > Trick of Light A Trick of the Light:
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![]() Figure 1 |
These photos show the site that inspired this article. They were taken in November, 2011, at a bedrock outcrop on Clarry Hill in Union and show glacial grooves under differing light conditions. |
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Closeups of the same glacial grooves at Clarry Hill in Union under differing light conditions. Here the contrast between sunlit and sunless views is even more striking. |
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Low-angle sunlight also helps to accentuate much larger glacial features. This photo is a late-fall view showing part of the Androscoggin Moraine complex on the ME-NH border (Thompson and Fowler, 1989). |
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Bedrock surfaces not only look different with varying illumination, but show certain details more clearly when they are wet. This photo shows a ledge in Warren that has been smoothed by glacial abrasion. |
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This photo shows an example of glacial grooves at the south end of the beach at Birch Point State Park in Owl's Head. The grooves on this ledge show much better when the rock surface is wet. |
Thompson, W. B., and Fowler, B. K., 1989, Deglaciation of the upper Androscoggin River valley and northwestern White Mountains, Maine and New Hampshire, in Tucker, R. D., and Marvinney, R. G. (editors), Studies in Maine geology, Volume 6, Quaternary geology: Maine Geological Survey, p. 71-88.
Text and photos by Woodrow B. Thompson
Originally published on the web as the June 2012 Site of the Month.
Last updated on July 9, 2012
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