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Mass movement & Glacial erosion Sections 3.1 & 3.3.

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Mass movement & Glacial erosion Sections 3.1 & 3.3
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Page 1: Mass movement & Glacial erosion Sections 3.1 & 3.3.

Mass movement & Glacial erosion

Sections 3.1 & 3.3

Page 2: Mass movement & Glacial erosion Sections 3.1 & 3.3.

Mass Movement

Page 3: Mass movement & Glacial erosion Sections 3.1 & 3.3.

Mass MovementErosion is the process by which natural forces move

weathered rock and soil from one place to another.Gravity, moving water, glaciers, waves, and wind are

all agents (causes) of erosion.Sediments are pieces of rock or soil, or the remains

of plants and animals.Deposition occurs when the agents of erosion

deposit, or lay down, sediments.Weathering, erosion, and deposition act together in a

never-ending cycle that wears down and builds up Earth’s surface.

Page 4: Mass movement & Glacial erosion Sections 3.1 & 3.3.

Mass MovementGravity is the force that pulls you downhill.Mass movement moves sediments downhill. It can

be fast or slow. Different types of mass movement include landslides, mudflows, slump, and creep.

Landslides= rock and soil move quickly down a steep slope.

Mudflow= rapid downhill movement of water, rock, and soil.

Slump= a mass of rock and soil suddenly moves down a slope in one large mass.

Creep= very slow downhill movement of rock and soil.

Page 5: Mass movement & Glacial erosion Sections 3.1 & 3.3.

Glacial Erosion A glacier is any large mass

of ice that moves slowly over land. Glaciers can only form in an area where more snow falls than melts.

Continental glaciers are glaciers that cover much of a continent or large island and flow in all directions as they move.

An ice age is a time in Earth’s history when glaciers covered much of the surface.

Page 6: Mass movement & Glacial erosion Sections 3.1 & 3.3.

Glacial Erosion A valley glacier is a long,

narrow glacier that forms when snow and ice build up high in a mountain valley.

Gravity constantly pulls a glacier downhill.

As a glacier flows over the land, it picks up rocks in a process called plucking. This can move huge boulders.

Abrasion is the grinding away of rock by other rock particles carried in water, ice, and wind.

Page 7: Mass movement & Glacial erosion Sections 3.1 & 3.3.

Glacial DepositionWhen a glacier melts, it deposits the sediments it eroded from the land, creating various landforms.

A glacial deposit in a mound or ridge is a moraine.


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