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Glacial Processes and Landforms

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Glacial Processes and Landforms Finger Lakes Region, New York Fjords What is a glacier? A glacier is simply the existence of year-round ice on the landscape. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Glacial Processes and Landforms


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Glacial Processes and Landforms
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  • What is a glacier?
  • A glacier is simply the existence of year-round
    ice on the landscape.
  • There are two broad types continental and
    alpine.
  • How do glaciers form?
  • Glaciers form whenever snowfall exceeds snowmelt
    year after year. The snow accumulates
    incrementally, pressure increases, and it is
    changed into névé and then ice by this pressure.

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Maximum Extent of Pleistocene Glaciation - 1/3 of
land surface Most recent glacial maximum peaked
18,000 years ago and is considered to have ended
10,000 B.P.
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Current Extent of Glaciation - about 10 of land
surface
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GLACIATION
  • http//homepage.smc.edu/robinson_richard/animation
    s/ani_glaciers.htm

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Franz Joseph Glacier and Outwash Plain, New
Zealand
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Why is a glacier the only thing that is ever
coming and going at the same time?
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  • Erosion by Glaciers
  • volume and speed determinesamount of erosion.
  • erodes slightly more effectively than water.
  • plucking and abrasion (rock-tipped blade).
  • polishing and striations.
  • Continental glaciers removeall soil, plants,
    and small hills.
  • Alpine glaciers change V-shapedvalleys to
    U-shaped.

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  • Transportation by Glaciers
  • will move material of all sizes, from glacial
    flour to massive boulders.
  • Slow transport.
  • Water in, on, and under glaciers (pluvial
    processes) moves much sediment as well.

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  • Deposition by Glaciers
  • drift is any material deposited by glaciers or
    their meltwater.
  • Till is that unsorted material that is deposited
    directly by ice.
  • Moraines are linear features deposited at bottom
    or along sides of glaciers.
  • Glacial erratics are enormous boulders
    transported and deposited by glaciers, often far
    from their source region.

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http//www.agpix.com/view_caption.php?image_id871
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Pilot Rock south of Cherokee, Iowa
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Alpine Glaciers
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Picture of Yosemite Falls---example of a hanging
valley
All of this was filled with ice
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Moraines
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Continental Glaciers or Ice Sheets
  • only two true ice sheets exist today Greenland
    and Antarctica
  • where they meet the sea they can form ice
    sheets.
  • vary in thickness from hundreds of feet to two
    miles deep
  • scour away all soil and vegetation and
    dramatically reshape the landscape and ecology of
    large regions.
  • much change occurs in the periglacial
    environment.

Ellesmere Island, Canada
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Continental Glaciers or Ice Sheets
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Continental Glaciers or Ice Sheets
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Finger Lakes Region, New York
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Fjords
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