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clearly the basis of the landscape here is glacial, though apart from gravel deposits (none on my place, unfortunately) i'm not clear on where the line is between what was dropped off, scoured away, and what was here before the glaciers-the point i forget about most--that there could have been soil here before glaciation which remained after? was it all removed and dumped back?
anyway, yes, i was thinking that moraines are closest to what i was thinking of as a finished product would you say that till is what plants are growing in in places such as at the foot of glaciers? those that i saw near columbia icefield were all in more or less soggy soil, i think, not sure if they ever get dried out in mid summer--i was there in july, i rather doubt at that altitude there is much time between melt and new snow, and as you say, what 'soil' there is among the stones is clay, so not much drainage other than on slopes or pockets that are mainly stone (such as the moraines a bit farther back, which i think were drier than those nearer the glacier which probably still have seepage)..
So from a limited dataset and with much broad assumption applied, I'd venture that pre-existing soils were largely planed off in this area.On your last point, yes, I was going to mention something about that but it seemed too complicated and too contrary to accepted rock gardening assumptions to wade into, LOL! Yes, some of those plants are growing in what is essentially till - it's melting out directly from the glacier, and where it is not being winnowed and sorted by running water, it's just till (as opposed to any more sorted and permeable substrate). Yet alpines grow there. I would venture to say that much of what has been written about and accepted as the only truth about growing alpines comes from observations of what may be necessary in very wet and warm(er) climates (i.e. the UK) where perfect drainage and shelter from humidity/rainfall may be necessary. It is not necessarily always so in nature. The new Wrightman's catalogue describes Halda's method for planting tufa crevice gardens by splitting tufa slabs along bedding surfaces, then buttering one side with a clay paste, inserting bare root alpines then sandwiching on the adjoining slab. I expect this sounds pretty unorthodox from the "perfect drainage" viewpoint. (In this case, however, drainage is still being provided by these slabs being elevated around the level of the surrounding soil in the trough or bed, and by the tufa itself.)
Cohan, thought you might be interested in these pics of the rock garden at Tilliepronie House in Aberdeenshire. The rocks are massive and would have needed heavy machinery to move.