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Chapter 8, Section 2
What is a glacier?
Large mass of snow and ice that moves on land under its own weight.
Formation of Glaciers
Snow stays on the ground year-round.
Increasing weight of newer layers on top compress the bottom layers into ice.
When the force become large enough, the lower layers become plastic-like and begin to move.
Erosion and Deposition
As glaciers move, they erode the land underneath them and carry the material elsewhere.
Plucking Glacial ice melts and flows into cracks in rocks.
Water in the cracks freezes and expands.
The rock becomes fractured. Pieces of the rock are lifted out
by the moving glacier, resulting in boulders, gravel, and sand being added to the bottom and sides of the glacier.
Transporting
Glaciers can transport large volumes of sediment and rock.
Scouring As glaciers move, the plucked rock fragments carried in the glacier scrape and scour the soil and bedrock over which the glacier travels. Grooves
Deep, long, parallel scars on rocks. Striations
More shallow scars. Grooves and striations indicate
the direction a glacier was traveling.
Melting Glaciers
As glaciers melt, they begin to shrink or retreat.
As the glacier retreats, it cannot carry as much sediment so the sediment is deposited.
Till Unsorted mixture of boulders, sand, clay, and silt left behind by a retreating glacier.
Can cover huge areas of land (enough to fill in whole valleys).
Moraine Deposits
Till that is deposited at the end and sides of a moving glacier. Occurs because rocks and soil
are moved to the ends of the glacier (like groceries piling up at the end of a conveyor belt).
Outwash Deposit
Material that is carried by melting water from the glacier and then deposited in layers beyond the end of the glacier. Heavier sediments are deposited
first and so are closer to the glacier.
Fan-shaped deposits (like at the mouth of a river) can also form.
Eskers Long winding ridge of till. Forms in a melting glacier when
meltwater forms a river within the ice.
The river carries sand and gravel which are deposited within the river channel.
Continental Glaciers
Huge masses of ice and snow. Can be thicker than some
mountain ranges. Cover only 10% of the Earth.
Mostly located near the poles in Antarctica and Greenland.
Climate Changes
Extensive glaciers have covered large portions of the Earth many times over the last 2 to 3 million years.
These periods are known as ice ages. Average air temperature was about 5
degrees Celsius colder than today. Continental glaciers covered as much
as 28% of the surface of the Earth. The last ice age hit its maximum
extent about 18,000 years ago.
Valley Glaciers
Form in high mountains where snow does not melt in the summer.
Evidence of Valley Glaciers
Striations Plucking Cirques
Bowl-shaped basins eroded into the side of the mountain by a valley glacier.
Arête Long ridge eroded between two valley
glaciers. Horn
Sharp peak eroded by many valley glaciers.
U-shaped Valleys (Streams and rivers form V-shaped
valleys.)
Affects of Glaciers
Greatly change the landscape of the Earth.
Leave behind economically important sediments such as sand and gravel deposits