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Earth Science - Glaciers & Ice Ages. Davidson Glacier near Haines, Alaska. Glacier: a large, long-lasting mass of ice, formed on land that moves under the influence of gravity and its own weight Glaciers form by accumulation and compaction of snow Packed snow becomes firn
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Earth Science - Glaciers & Ice Ages
Glacier: a large, long-lasting mass of ice, formed on land that moves under the influence of gravity and its own weight Glaciers form by accumulation and compaction of snow Packed snow becomes firn Then refreezes to ice Glaciers
Glaciation Types • Alpine Glaciation: found in mountainous regions • Continental Glaciation: exists where a large part of a continent is covered by glacial ice - cover vast areas
Alpine Glaciers • Are confined by surrounding mountains Types: • Cirque Glaciers – erode basins in mountainsides • Valley Glaciers – flow into preexisting stream valleys • Icecaps – form on mountaintops
Types of Glaciers– Cirque Glacier Mount Edith Cavell, Jasper National Park, Canada
Types of Glaciers – Valley Glacier Tongas National Forest, Alaska
Types of Glaciers – Icecap and Continental Sentinal Range, Antarctica
A Glacier’s Budget • A story of gains and losses • Gain snow in zone of accumulation • Lose ice in zone of ablation • Budget can be: • Positive (growth) • Static (unchanging) • Negative (net melting)
A Glacier’s Budget Year round Snow Summer Rain Note that a glacier is a river. Even if the terminus doesn’t advance, still flows
Iceberg Calving – Hubbard Glacier, Wrangell-St. Elias National Park, Alaska
Erosion by Glaciers • Abrasion • Rocks embedded in glacier’s base make linear scratches and grooves in bedrock • Quarrying • Glacier breaks off and removes large blocks of rock
Glacial Abrasion in Bedrock Source:Tom Bean
Glacial Erosion – Roche Moutonee Yosemite NP, California
Erosion by Glaciers (cont) • Alpine glaciers erode mountain slopes into horseshoe shaped basins called cirques • Erosion of multiple cirques erodes intervening rock, causing: • Horns: pointy peaks • Aretes: long serrated ridges • Cols: passes through the ridges.
Alpine Glacial Erosion Origin of Hanging Valley
Valley Glaciers • Erode a large quantity of bedrock and sediment • Convert V-shaped stream valleys into U-shaped glacial valleys.
Seawater Flooded U-ShapedValleys: Fjords Bela Bela Fjord, BC
Erosion by Continental Glaciation • Erosional Landforms much larger in scale than alpine glaciers • Huge U-shaped troughs, including: Finger Lakes, Great Lakes, Puget Sound, and Loch Ness were all once valleys excavated by glaciers
Erosion of Preglacial Lowlands (Great Lakes of North America) Source:U.S. Dept. of Interior, USGS Eros Date Center
Glacial Deposits or Drift • Glacial Till: unsorted, unstratified sediments deposited by melting ice. • May contain glacial erratics • Often accumulate at glacier’s terminus as a Moraine: hills of sediment left by a glacier’s retreat.
Effects of Glaciation • Change Climate –increased precipitation • Drop in sea-level:alter coastlines • Form continent-wide Dams • Divert streams – Ohio and Missouri rivers
Causes of Ice Ages • Plate Tectonics Moves Continents to Poles Raises mountains above snowline • Orbit Distances, Axis Tilt and Wobble • Moderates solar radiation past 65° N • Croll-Milankovitch Cycles ~ 100,000 years • Low summertime radiation causes glaciers to expand
Glacier Distribution 20,000 ya Approximate Maximum
Milankovitch Cycles 100,000 years
Earth’s Past Ice Ages • PreCambrian Glaciation • 750 mya ice flowed from poles to tropics • Late Pennsylvanian & Permian Glaciation • covered South Africa, South America, India, Australia • Pleistocene Glaciation • most recent, ended about 10,000 years ago
Pleistocene Glaciation • started 1.6 mya -30 advances and retreats • Latest retreat ended 10,000 years ago • “Little Ice Age” occurred 700 to 150 years ago, paralyzed Europe • Next glaciation period - ???
Sustained warming since 1850 Athabaska Glacier, Columbia Icefield, W. Canada