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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

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The Matterhorn

In the Swiss alps

Page 10: Glacial Erosion and Depositional Features

• A Swiss glacier is eroding the mountain.

Glacier at work

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Swiss Alps are glacially sculpted

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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.

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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.

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Glacial Erratics

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

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• 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

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CL

Moraine dams the lake

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• Banff National Park• The haze is from the

forest fires of 2003

Moraine Lake

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

Peyto Lake

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• 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

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Retreating Glacier

End moraine

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The retreating Athabasca GlacierJasper National Park, Alberta

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

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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.

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Kennicott Glacier, Alaska.

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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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