1 / 17

GLACIERS An agent of erosion, weathering, and deposition

GLACIERS An agent of erosion, weathering, and deposition. What are glaciers ?. Glaciers are large masses of moving ice and snow on land They are found in areas where there is a lot of snowfall that doesn’t melt from winter to winter

peggy
Download Presentation

GLACIERS An agent of erosion, weathering, and deposition

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. GLACIERS An agent of erosion, weathering, and deposition

  2. What are glaciers? • Glaciers are largemasses of moving ice and snowonland • They are found in areaswherethereis a lot of snowfallthatdoesn’tmeltfromwintertowinter • As a result, a deep layer of compacted snow accumulates. This layer of snow becomes compressed into a thick sheet of ice.

  3. What makes glaciers unique is that they move. Due to their mass and the force of gravity, glaciers flow down hill a few centimeters or meters per year.

  4. These great sheets of ice -glaciers- create landforms through both erosion and deposition.

  5. Howdoes a glacierwork? • As theglaciergrowsfrom ice accumulation, itbeginstomeltonthebottombecause of allthepressurefromabove • Whenitmelts, itbeginstoslide, and thedirt and rocksunderneaththeglaciererodethesurfacethattheglacierdragsacross • Over time, rocks and sedimentscarriedbymovingglaciers can carveordeepenvalleys

  6. In the photo above, you can see “scratches” on the rock left by the action of a glacier.

  7. Imagine that scrapping continuing for millions of years and you can see how glaciers turn V shaped valleys into U shaped valleys.

  8. http://www.flickr.com/theslowlane As the glacier moves through a V-shaped valley, it sculpts a “U”.

  9. A horn is a pyramid-shaped mountain peak created by several glaciers eroding away at different sides of the same mountain. http://www.geology.wisc.edu

  10. Howdoes a glacierwork? • Glaciersalsodepositmaterials, as theirfrontendmelt • Theglaciercontinuestomove, butitmeltsfasterthanitmoves (retreating) • As the ice melts, itdropsits load (rocks, sediment), farfromwheretheyoriginallywere

  11. Rocks and sediment deposited on the sides or the end of glaciers create moraines, like these. . Wikipedia Commons Wikipedia Commons

  12. There are two types of glaciers Continental glaciers form over large areas of continents close to the North and South Poles. Continental glacier in Antarctica

  13. Mountain glaciers arerelatively small glaciers that form near the tops of mountains. Mountain glacier in the Rocky Mountains

  14. During the past Ice Ages, very thick continental ice sheets overlaid much of the continent of North America. These very thick glaciers covered all but the highest mountains and resulted in significant erosion. Grey shaded area—continental glaciers

  15. Many lakes in North America including the Great Lakes, were created by glaciers moving over the rock and gouging out deep “holes” which filled with water when the glaciers melted.

  16. In the last Ice Age, which ended approximately 10,000 years ago, 32% of Earth's land area was covered with glaciers. Glaciers now cover only about 10% of the land area.

  17. That glacial ice is found mainly over Antarctica. Most of the other glaciers cover Greenland; the remaining small percentage are mountain glaciers found in places such as Alaska, the Canadian Arctic, New Zealand, the Himalayan Mountains, the Rocky Mountains and the Alps.

More Related