Late Cenozoic glaciation directly affected sedimentation on  more than half the Earth's continental shelves. Ice continues to be a  dominant influence on sedimentation around Greenland and Antarctica,  and on the shelves facing the Arctic Ocean. The features of these  shelves include true glacimarine features, i.e. those found in a  marine environment in proximityto, or strongly under the influence of,  ice, such as iceberg scours and pits, ice gouges and incisions,  subglacial outwash deposits, and diamictons resulting from ice  rafting. Also seen, because large areas of the shelves were exposed  during the Pleistocene lowering of sea level, are terrestrial glacial  and periglacial features, e.g. fluvial outwash valleys and associated  deposits, tunnel valleys, drumlin fields and lodgement till, which  have subsequently been submerged and modified by marine influences.  
  Glaciated Continental Margins: An Atlas of Acoustic Images  illustrates the complexity of features found in glaciated and formerly  glaciated marine environments. The volume was assembled by an  international Editorial Committee, led by Thomas A. Davies (University  of Texas), from records gathered in the course of recent research and  contributed by members of the scientific community from around the  world. These include seismic sections, side-scan maps, and 3-D seismic  data, supplemented in some cases by bottom photographs and core data,  with accompanying text. The work is scientists at 40 institutions in  10 countries is represented. 
  This book will be an invaluable resource for students, Quaternary  scientists, glaciologists, marine geologists and geophysicists,  geotechnical engineers, and surveyors teachers working in  universities, research institutions and government agencies with  interests in polar and subpolar regions, as well as those in  industries with offshore interests.