Glacial Landforms
Glacial Landforms
Glacial Landforms
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Glacial Fundamental
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Glacial Landforms
Glaciers are large masses of moving ice
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Ice sheets Glaciers
Cover extensive areas of continental landmasses
Alpine glaciers
Long, linear glaciers that occupy high altitude mountain valleys,
Flow down valley, and increase in size as they accumulate and absorb
smaller tributary glaciers from the mountainous terrain.
Found throughout the world: Rockies, Andes, and Himalayas.
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Ice Sheets and Alpine Glaciers
Antarctic Ice Sheet
Glacier National Park, Montana
• Landscape contains vestiges of past
glaciation
• Few active, high elevation alpine
glaciers.
• Forecast: by 2030 there may not be
any more glaciers in the park
1938 2005
Antarctica 90% coverage
Greenland 80% coverage
Crust is isostatically depressed
Ice caps are circular shaped masses of glacial ice that cover an area less
than 50,000 km2. Ice caps form in mountain regions and they completely
bury the underlying topography. Ice caps are similar to ice sheets, only
smaller.
Copyright ©Bruce Molnia, Terra Photographics Source: wikimedia commons, NASA image
Often source rivers and streams that form from glacial melt water and till
deposits.
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Copyright ©Bruce Molnia, Terra Photographics
Ice Shelves, Tidal Glaciers
Tidal glaciers, Ice Shelves are the portion of either alpine or continental
glaciers which extend out into saltwater.
Calving of glacial ice produces icebergs.
Calving often occurs along crevasses or cracks in the ice, but can also
fail from a combination of melting and gravitational pull.
Melting icebergs will produce ice rafted sediments
Ice shelf, Weddel Sea
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Ice Shelves, Tidal Glaciers
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Glacial “U-Shaped” Valleys
Yosemite Valley, past glacial activity
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Fjords
Created when glacially valleys intersect the ocean and are partially flooded
Active glaciation or post-glaciation depending on sea-level.
Chile, USGS
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Hanging Valleys
Abrupt, cliff-like features
Remnants of a confluence between tributary glaciers and valley glaciers.
Scour by the valley glacier erodes the original gradient of the tributary
confluence.
Hanging valleys are revealed when the glacier melts
Hanging Valley
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Bridalveil Falls, Yosemite
Cirques and Cirque Glaciers
Bowl-shaped eroded, depressions near-mountain top ridges where snow
accumulates and forms the head of an alpine glacier.
Cirque glaciers: early stage of formation.
The confluence of multiple cirque glaciers form a valley glacier.
When glaciers retreat, the cirque is often the last part to melt.
Cirque Glaciers
Arête
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Chugach Mountains, Alaska
Lateral and Medial Moraines
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Paternoster Lakes
Connected string of small, circular lakes that occur in relict glacial valleys.
Post glacial erosional features filled with rainwater or glacial meltwater.
Result of either differential erosion of the bedrock, or the creation of
small dams formed by glacial till deposits or end moraines.
Precipitation or springs provide a renewable source of freshwater.
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Kettles
Small depressions in the landscape, often filled with water post glaciation
Large blocks of ice are left by a retreating glacier
Outwash sediments deposited around the blocks, possible burial
Ice block melts, only a void or kettle remains.
Subsidence and melting can deepen the kettle.
Kettles lakes are sourced by rainfall or snowmelt.
Canadian Arctic 20
Kames, Eskers
Kames and Eskers are melt water
deposits
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Kames, Eskers
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Erratics
Large, isolated boulders deposited by
retreating, melting glaciers.
Yosemite Valley.
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Source: Wikimedia Commons
Drumlins
Drumlins are long, linear hills of glacial till deposited by ice sheets.
Similar to medial and lateral moraines, smaller, irregular shaped
Drumlin fields are areas with numerous drumlins.
New York
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Outwash Plains
Extensive stratified deposits of glacial till below a glacier.
Choked with glacial till and are fed by melt-water flowing from the
base of the glacier often creating a braided stream environment.
Sorting does occur finer materials transported downstream.
Greenland
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Long Island in Context
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