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Glaciers

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Ar tes- are jagged ridges that form between the cirques. Horn- when several ar tes join up to form a kind of jagged pyramid. Glacial deposition ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Glaciers


1
Glaciers
  • By
  • Dylan
  • Tony

2
Overview
  • Describe how Glaciers form.
  • Show Types of glaciers.
  • explain how glaciers Move.
  • Something about snow.

Snowline Snowfield Valley glacier Continental ice
sheets Basal slip Internal Plastic Flow Features
of glaciers Erratic Till deposits Stratified
drift deposition Yellow snow
3
Formation of glaciers
  • Snowline- The elevation at which snow falls and
    doesnt melt throughout the year.
  • Snowfield (ice field)- is the accumulation of
    snow above the snowline.
  • Firn- a type of ice that is frozen, partially
    melted and then refrozen ect.. It was originally
    snow but do to all the freezing and melting has
    transformed into ice crystals
  • In deep regions of snow deposits, the firns are
    compressed to the point where all the oxygen is
    pressed out of them and thus they turn blue, the
    white color returns after that area is exposed to
    more oxygen for instance if a portion of it were
    to fracture.
  • The rate at witch a glacier would grow or shrink
    is proportional to the rate of snow that is
    melted and/or evaporated. More snow, less
    melting growth less snow more melting decrees
    in size.

4
Types of glaciers
  • Valley glacier- when ice moves down a valley, the
    larger the surrounding mountains the larger the
    glacier (usually)
  • Continental ice sheets- its a giant sheet of
    ice, it can occur over oceans. The only two
    places currently hosting these phenomena are
    Greenland and Antarctica.
  • Ice sheets can be extremely thick, for instance
    in some regains of Antarctica the ice sheet is
    over four thousand meters thick
  • Scientists hypothesize that if these two sheets
    were to melt, the sea level would raise by over
    60 meters.

5
Movement of glaciers
  • It is said that some glaciers travel one hundred
    meters per year, but that is all dependent upon
    the conditions of the amount of snow fall vs the
    melting.
  • There are two type of glacial movement
  • Basal slip and internal plastic flow

6
Basal slip
  • Over time the weight of all the ice on top will
    cause the ice in contact with the group to melt
    and then the water freezes and the above ice
    slips over it.

7
Internal Plastic Flow
  • This process is where the ice firns just tumble
    over each other on the bottom layer of ice.
  • Rate of movement is determined by the angle of
    the slope

8
Features of glaciers
  • Do to all the different stresses a giant mount of
    moving ice makes, deep cracks can form and they
    are called crevasses
  • Some times they arent visible other times they
    are.

9
Glacial erosion
  • Cirque- when a glacier pulls rocks form the floor
    of the upper valley
  • Arêtes- are jagged ridges that form between the
    cirques
  • Horn- when several arêtes join up to form a kind
    of jagged pyramid

10
Glacial deposition
  • Erratic- when a bolder is transported by a
    glacier
  • Glacial drift
  • -till is made up of jumbled rock material
  • -Stratified drift is where rock material has been
    sorted and deposited

11
Till deposits
  • Landorms built from till are called moraines.
  • Lateral moraine- where sediment is deposited on
    the side of a valley glacier, usually along a
    ridge.
  • Medial moraine- is when two or more valley
    glaciers meet and there lateral moraines combine
  • Ground moraine- any material not picked up by the
    glacier.

12
Stratified drift deposition
  • Out wash plain- small rock fragments that are
    some times carried when parts of a glacier melt
  • Kettles are formed when glacial ice are is buried
    in a drift when the drift collapses the indention
    is still there, they some times form lakes
  • Eskers- what the material from the water forms,
    they can form things that look like raised
    winding roads.

13
lakes
  • The great lakes were formed by glaciers
  • Also most salt lakes were formed by glaciers as
    well, they initially were not very salty but as
    time went on and more evaporation occurred, the
    saltier they got.

14
THE END
  • Overall lesson
  • Never eat Yellow snow
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