Since the discovery of the Neoproterozoic 'Snowball Earth' glaciations, the climate history of the Earth in the Precambrian has been in the spotlight more than ever.Here we investigate the ≤1871 Ma old Fagervik diamictite, exposed along the coast of the Bothnian Gulf in northern Sweden, on the Fennoscandian Shield. Previously described as a magmatic, hydraulic breccia, we reinterpret this deposit as a subglacial, deformed till, based on syndepositional textures, particularly the imprint of significant crushing and bedding-parallel shearing. A greenschist-facies metamorphic overprint affected the matrix mineralogy, but preserved characteristic synsedimentary macro-and microtextures. The diamictite formed near sea-level most likely at low geographical latitude. This would be a second account of a glacigenic deposit from the late Palaeoproterozoic era in Sweden, following evidence for ~1895 Ma periglacial and proglacial sedimentary rocks in Bergslagen, South central Sweden.Deposition of Precambrian Banded Iron Formations (BIFs) was commonly associated with glaciations, but for 1.9-1.8 Ga BIFs the correlation was less evident.