1 / 19

Physical Geography by Alan Arbogast Chapter 17

Physical Geography by Alan Arbogast Chapter 17. Glacial Geomorphology: Processes & Landforms. Lawrence McGlinn Department of Geography State University of New York - New Paltz. History of Glaciation. As early as 2.3 B years ago, ice covered much of Earth, and off and on since then

barto
Download Presentation

Physical Geography by Alan Arbogast Chapter 17

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Physical Geographyby Alan ArbogastChapter 17 Glacial Geomorphology: Processes & Landforms Lawrence McGlinn Department of Geography State University of New York - New Paltz

  2. History of Glaciation • As early as 2.3 B years ago, ice covered much of Earth, and off and on since then • Most important Ice Age was Pleistocene Epoch, 1.8 M years ago till 10K years ago • Glacial – period when glaciers expand from poles – cooler temps, lower sea level, • Interglacial – period when glaciers recede: warmer temps, higher sea level

  3. Pleistocene Glaciations • Named for southern extent of ice sheet in North America • Nebraskan – 1 million yrs ago • Kansan – 625 K yrs ago • Illinoisan – 300 K yrs ago • Wisconsin – 35 K to 10 K yrs ago • Laurentide Ice Sheet – eastern North America • Cordilleran Ice Sheet – western North America

  4. Maximum Extent of Pleistocene Glaciation 30% of earth’s surface covered by ice sheets (Only 11% coverage today)

  5. Oxygen Isotopes

  6. Evidence of More Glaciations? • Ice core samples suggest more than the known 4 glaciations – show more cool, glacial periods • Oxygen isotopes O-16 & O-18 both in water, but O-18 evaporates more in warmer climate, so ratio of O-16 to O-18 in ice cores can indicate relative warmth of climates over 1 million yrs ago!

  7. Causes of Glaciation • Summer temp (melting) is key to glaciation • Possible Factors:1. Variations in solar radiation (dust, sunspots…) 2. Reduced carbon dioxide (escaping heat) 3. Increased volcanic activity (reflective dust) 4. Variations in Earth-Sun geometry (axial tilt, shape of orbit, rotation)

  8. Milankovitch Theory • Dominant theory of causes of glaciation, based on Earth-Sun geometry: • Orbital eccentricity – strongly elliptical orbit puts Earth farthest from Sun in summer, cooling it • Tilt obliquity – Earth’s tilt varies from 22.1º to 24.5º - less tilt means lower angle Sun and less insolation at poles, thus cooler summers • Orbital precession – wobbles of Earth’s axis - North Pole may point toward Sun at farthest point of orbit, creating a cool summer

  9. Milankovitch Theory Orbital Eccentricity Axial Tilt Orbital Precession When three factors coincide, high probability of glaciation Glacial Geomorphology: Processes and Landforms

  10. Climate Change and Glaciers • Since mid-1800s glaciers have been receding, both alpine and continental • Alps, Parts of Andes, Mt. Kilimanjaro melting • Thousands of sq miles of Antarctica & Greenland ice sheet lost over last 30 years due to warming • Melting area of Greenland has increased rapidly since early 1990s

  11. Climate Change and Glaciers

  12. Climate Change and Glaciers

  13. Periglacial Processes and Landscapes • In near-glacial environments – constant freeze/thaw cycle effects on landscape • Permafrost – ground that is permanently frozen • Continuous – poleward of -7ºC mean annual isotherm – all surfaces frozen exp under water – avg 400 m thick, up to 1000 m thick • Discontinuous – poleward of -1ºC mean annual isotherm – thinner than continuous, esp. on south facing slopes

  14. Extent of Permafrost

  15. Permafrost Processes • Active Layer – soil that melts & refreezes daily or seasonally – as thin as 10 cm in continuous permafrost, up to 2 m thick in discontinous • Dramatic warming in arctic is making active layer much thicker & releasing tons of CO2 • Talik – body of unfrozen ground within permafrost, e.g. under a lake, important for movement of groundwater

  16. Periglacial Landscape(Cross Section)

  17. Ground Ice • Ground Ice – distinct zones of frozen water within the ground – variable amts of water • As these areas freeze & thaw, expand & contract, they cause physical weathering • Ice Wedge – water enters crack in active layer • Pingo – surface bulges because of ice under pressure below • Patterned Ground – land broken into polygons as frost pushes coarser material to surface

  18. Ground Ice Landforms Ice Wedge Pingo Patterned Ground

More Related