Till is a form of
glacial drift, which is rock material transported by a
glacier and deposited directly from the ice or from running water emerging from the ice. It is distinguished from other forms of drift in that it is deposited directly by glaciers without being reworked by meltwater. Till is characteristically
unsorted and
unstratified, and is not usually
consolidated. Most till consists predominantly of clay,
silt, and
sand, but with pebbles, cobbles, and boulders scattered through the till. The abundance of clay demonstrates lack of reworking by turbulent flow, which otherwise would
winnow the clay. Typically, the distribution of particle sizes shows two peaks (it is
bimodal) with pebbles predominating in the coarser peak. Clasts in till may also show slight
imbrication, with the clasts dipping upstream. Early researchers tended to prefer the term
boulder clay for the same kind of sediments, but this has fallen into disfavor. Where it is unclear whether a poorly sorted, unconsolidated glacial deposit was deposited directly from glaciers, it is described as
diamict or (when
lithified) as
diamictite.
Tillite is a
sedimentary rock formed by lithification of till. ==Processes==