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Hummocks and Hillocks EarthCache

This cache has been locked, but it is available for viewing.
Hidden : 1/5/2011
Difficulty:
2.5 out of 5
Terrain:
2.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   other (other)

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Geocache Description:

The upper grasslands of Lac du Bois Provincial Park invite hikers and geocachers to investigate the natural history of the area. The area near the cache site is a treeless grassland, punctuated with hillocks, hummocks, moraines, rills, kettles, kames, and drumlins. You will enter the area and stand on a hillock to observe these features. You are encouraged to go up and down adjacent hummocks and hillocks to observe the landscape.

The area is mostly covered with igneous rock with some sedimentary deposits. Bachelor Ridge on the east side is mostly 280 million year old igneous rock. Most of Lac du Bois Park though, area is composed of igneous rock formed between 30 million and 25 million years ago. The surface features were formed about 25000 years ago when ice sheets covered the valleys of the Interior of BC. The ice depth ranged from 2000m in the deepest valleys to 500m thick on the highest uplands.

The ice generally moved in a southeast direction, with ice moving slowly or more quickly depending on the underlying slope, the weight of the ice mass and the pressures of competing ice sheets. The valley glaciers generally moved from the higher areas to the NW towards the southeast, scraping, bulldozing, and reshaping the land. Erosion features like drumlins were formed under the ice.



As the glaciers retreated about 10 000 years ago, a surface layer of glacial till was left behind, in some cases as deep as several metres.
Glaciers deposited some loose rocks and fragments in a random fashion which we call ablation till. Glaciofluvial deposits were laid down in layers by meltwaters. They are characterized by being sorted to size/type in a layer of strata.

As the glaciers retreated, they deposited moraines, boulders, and till material into shapes.



  • Terminal, lateral or ground moraines deposited by the retreating glaciers leave ridges and hummocks.
  • Kames were formed by meltwater flowing into depressions in the ice and then are left as mounds or small hills. Kame Terraces are found on hillsides.
  • Alluvial fans are wide fan-shaped deposits at the base of hills where the debris from an outwash has been deposited.
  • Eskers are winding ridges of depositional debris following the channel of a stream flowing beneath the ice.
  • Erratics are boulders carried on top of the ice and deposited in unlikely spots.
  • Drumlins have a stream-lined teardrop shape with the steep side facing the direction from which the ice came.




This cache was placed in an area composed of tracts of hillocks and depressions of variable size and shape, formed by glacial deposits formed around bedrock. Park in the established BC Parks parking area (see the waypoint listed). Climb on top of a hillock to observe the terrain. You are encouraged to go up and down adjacent hillocks and ridges to observe the landscape.

To complete this geocache, cachers are asked to:
  • Take a photograph with your GPS in the forefront, showing the glacial features from the cache and post it to the cache (optional)
  • Scan the area looking for kames or kame terraces. Identify their location (bearing) and distance from the cache coordinates.
  • Scan or search the area for erratics.
  • Look for eskers or drumlins.
  • Look at the ridge to the east-northeast and decide if it is shaped like an esker or drumlin.
  • Note the long ridge running north-south. Speculate on how it was formed.
  • Summarize your findings in an email to the owner, but do not include your findings in the cache listing.


Additional Hints (No hints available.)