Abstract
The Yarmouth drumlinized area is a relatively small field of about 150 drumlins located south and south-east of the town of Yarmouth, Nova Scotia. An analysis of the drumlin shapes indicates that in the majority of cases the stoss end is on the southern extremity of the drumlin. This would suggest that the ice moved in from the south, a concept which is contradictory to pebble lithology and fabric analysis of the till in the drumlins and surrounding ground moraine. The drumlin field is anomalous in other respects in that the drumlin density is very low compared with other fields, and granulometric analysis shows that the drumlins are composed of coarse-grained material with only minor amounts of clay. It is suggested that the drumlins were originally formed by south to south-easterly flowing ice but during a later phase of glaciation a local centre of outflow, probably short-lived, developed south of Yarmouth on the continental shelf, and the drumlins were reshaped by ice flowing toward the north prior to the disappearance of this centre. Thus this area of drumlins was presumably not affected by the later area of outflow centred on the interior upland of western Nova Scotia which was hitherto believed to account for the Yarmouth drumlins.

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