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Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

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Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features. How Do Glaciers Affect the Landscape?. Glacial Erosion. Glaciers remove loose rock from the valleys The flowing glacier pries rocks loose and incorporates them into the ice. Glacial Striations. Rocks scrape the underlying bedrock - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features How Do Glaciers Affect the Landscape?
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Page 1: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

How Do Glaciers Affect the Landscape?

Page 2: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

Glacial Erosion

• Glaciers remove loose rock from the valleys• The flowing glacier pries rocks loose and

incorporates them into the ice

Page 3: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

Glacial Striations

• Rocks scrape the underlying bedrock• This picture was taken near Squamish 1997

Page 4: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

Valley Shape

• Glaciers will carve out a U shaped valley

Page 5: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

• A fjord is a U shaped valley filled in with water. It’s also called an inlet.

Fjords and InletsSognefjord, Norway

Page 6: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

Erosional Features

• At the top of an alpine glacier a semicircular basin is carved out called a cirque

• When two cirques form on a peak the ridge separating them is called an arête

• Three or more cirques on a mountain can carve out a horn

Page 7: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

The glacier erodes

Page 8: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

After the glacier melts

Page 9: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

The Matterhorn

In the Swiss alps

Page 10: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

• A Swiss glacier is eroding the mountain.

Glacier at work

Page 11: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

Swiss Alps are glacially sculpted

Page 12: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

Glacial Deposits

• Glaciers pick up everything in its path, even the largest boulders.

• Large amounts of sediment can be carried large distances by glaciers.

• Glacial deposit is called till.

Page 13: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

Erratics

• Erratics are large boulders carried and then deposited by a glacier.

• It marks the furthest extent of the glacier.• Near 12th Avenue and 200th Street, Surrey.

Page 14: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

Glacial Erratics

Estonia, Gulf of Finland. These rocks were carried and deposited by glaciers from Finland to Estonia

Page 15: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

• Burnaby Mountain ParkGlacial Erratics

Page 16: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

Moraines

• A moraine is a mound or ridge of till deposited by a glacier

• The different places along a glacier’s advance will result in the different types of moraines

Page 17: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

CL

Moraine dams the lake

Page 18: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

• Banff National Park• The haze is from the

forest fires of 2003

Moraine Lake

Page 19: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

• Bluest lake in the Rockies. The glacial till causes the light to be scattered leaving the lake very blue.

Peyto Lake

Page 20: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

• End moraine of the Matanuska Glacier, Alaska. • Note the poorly sorted sediment; The boulders are

several meters in diameter.

End Moraine

Page 21: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

• The terminus of a glacier may remain stationary for years.• The sediment piles up in a ridge called an end moraine.• If this marks the furthest extent of the glacier it is a

terminal moraine.

Formation of end moraine

Page 22: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

Retreating Glacier

End moraine

Page 23: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

The retreating Athabasca GlacierJasper National Park, Alberta

Page 24: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

On the Athabasca GlacierGlaciers are full of dirt, and there are crevasses.

Page 25: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

Lateral Moraine

• Lateral moraines are accumulations of sediment on the margins of glaciers.  • Rock slides, rock falls, snow avalanches and other forms of mass wasting are

especially efficient at loading the margins of the glacier with this material. 

Page 26: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

Formation of a Medial Moraine

• The medial moraine forms where two tributary glaciers meet, and their adjacent lateral moraines merge to form the medial moraine.

Page 27: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

Kennicott Glacier, Alaska.

Page 28: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

Medial Moraine

At least how many tributary glaciers must there be to create this formation?

Three, because there are two medial moraines

• Switzerland, Aletsch Glacier in the Bernese Oberland


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