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Tim Horner
CSUS Geology Department
Glaciers and Glaciation
Physical Geology, Chapter 12
Glaciers and Earth’s Systems
• A glacier is a large, long-lasting mass
of ice, formed on land, that moves
downhill under its own weight
• Glaciers are part of Earth’s hydrosphere
• Along with sea ice, glaciers are known
as the cryosphere
• About 75% of the world’s supply of
fresh water is locked up in glacial ice
a long, narrow inlet with steep
sides or cliffs, created by a
glacier.Fjords
ridge of a mountain that protrudes from
an ice field or glacier that otherwise
covers most of the mountain ...Nunatak
Periglacial' describes a landscape that
undergoes seasonal freezing and
thawing, typically on the fringes of
past and present glaciated regions.
Formation of
Glaciers
• Glaciers develop as snow is compacted
and recrystallized, first into firn and then
glacial ice
• A glacier can only form where more snow
accumulates during the winter than melts
away during the spring and summer
• Two types of glaciated terrains on Earth:
– Alpine glaciation occurs in mountainous
regions in the form of valley glaciers
– Continental glaciation covers large land masses
in Earth’s polar regions in the form of ice sheets
– Glaciation occurs in areas cold enough to allow
accumulated snow to persist from year to year
Anatomy of a Glacier
• An advancing glacier gains more snow
than it loses, has a positive budget
– End or terminus of glacier advances downslope
• A receding glacier has a negative budget
– Terminus of glacier shrinks back upslope
• Snow is added in the zone of accumulation of glaciers, whereas
melting (and calving of icebergs) occurs in the zone of ablation
• The equilibrium line, which separates accumulation and
ablation zones, will advance or retreat depending on climate
Movement of Glaciers
• Valley glaciers and ice sheets
move downslope under the force
of gravity
• Movement occurs by basal sliding
and plastic flow of the lower part
of the glacier, and passive “riding
along” of an overlying rigid zone
– Crevasses are fractures formed in the
upper rigid zone during glacier flow
• Due to friction, glacier flow is
fastest at the top center of a glacier
and slowest along its margins
plastic flow (plural plastic flows) (physics) Any fluid flow in
which movement is proportional to the applied force (above the
yield value). (geology) Any deformation caused by a
sustained force.
Basal sliding is the act of a glacier sliding over the bed due
to meltwater under the ice acting as a lubricant. This
movement very much depends on the temperature of the area,
the slope of the glacier, the bed roughness, the amount of
meltwater from the glacier, and the glacier's size.
Glacial Erosion
• Glaciers erode underlying
rock by plucking of rock
fragments and abrasion as
they are dragged along
– Basal abrasion polishes and
striates the underlying rock
surface and produces
abundant fine rock powder
known as rock flour
Erosional
Landscapes
• Erosional landforms produced by
valley glaciers include:
– U-shaped valleys
– Hanging valleys
• Smaller tributary glacial valleys left
stranded above more quickly eroded
central valleys
– Cirques
• Steep-sided, half-bowl-shaped recesses
carved into mountains at the heads of
glacial valleys
– Arêtes
• Sharp ridges separating glacial valleys
– Horns
• Sharp peaks remaining after cirques have
cut back into a mountain on 3+ sides
Erosional Landscapes
• Erosional landforms produced by
valley glaciers include:
– U-shaped valleys
– Hanging valleys
• Smaller tributary glacial valleys left
stranded above more quickly eroded
central valleys
Erosional Landscapes
• Erosional landforms produced by
valley glaciers include:
– Cirques
• Steep-sided, half-bowl-shaped
recesses carved into mountains
at the heads of glacial valley
Erosional Landscapes
• Erosional landforms produced by valley
glaciers include:
– Arêtes
• Sharp ridges separating glacial valleys
– Horns
• Sharp peaks remaining after cirques have cut back
into a mountain on 3+ sides
Glacial
Deposition
• General name for unsorted,
unlayered glacial sediment is
till
– Deposits of till left behind at the
sides and end of a glacier are
called lateral, medial and end
moraines, respectively
• Lateral moraines are
elongate, low mounds of till
along sides of valley glaciers
Glacial
Deposition
• Medial moraines are lateral
moraines trapped between adjacent
ice streams
• End moraines are ridges of till
piled up along the front end of a
glacier
• Successive end moraines left behind
by a retreating glacier are called
recessional moraines
Glacial Deposition
• Large amounts of liquid water flow
over, beneath and away from the ice at
the end of a glacier
• Sediment deposited by this water is
known as glacial outwash
• Sediment-laden streams emerging
from ends of glaciers have braided
channel drainage patterns
• Outwash landforms include drumlins,
eskers, kettles and kames
• Annual sediment deposition in glacial
lakes produces varves, which can be
counted like tree rings
Glacial Deposition
• Large amounts of liquid water flow
over, beneath and away from the ice at
the end of a glacier
• Sediment deposited by this water is
known as glacial outwash
• Sediment-laden streams emerging
from ends of glaciers have braided
channel drainage patterns
• Outwash landforms include drumlins,
eskers, kettles and kames
• Annual sediment deposition in glacial
lakes produces varves, which can be
counted like tree rings
Direct Effects of
Past Glaciation
• Large-scale glaciation of North
America during the most recent ice
age produced the following effects:
– Most of the soil and sedimentary
rocks were scraped off underlying
crystalline rock in northern and
eastern Canada, and lake basins
were gouged out of the bedrock
– Extensive sets of recessional
moraines were left behind by
retreating ice sheets in the upper
midwestern U.S. and Canada
Indirect Effects of Past Glaciation
• Large pluvial lakes (formed in a period
of abundant rainfall) existed in closed
basins in Utah, Nevada and eastern
California
– Great Salt Lake is remnant of much larger
pluvial Lake Bonneville
– Huge floods emanated as ice-dammed lakes
(e.g., Lake Missoula) drained catastrophically
• Sea level was significantly lowered by
large amounts of water locked up into ice
sheets, allowing stream channels and
glaciers to erode valleys below present-
day sea level
– Fiords are coastal inlets formed by drowning
of glacially carved valleys by rising sea level
Evidence for Older Glaciation
• Rocks called tillites, lithified glacial till, have distinctive
textures that suggest emplacement of sediments by glaciers
– Unsorted rock particles including angular, faceted and striated boulders
• In some areas, old tillites directly overlie polished and striated
crystalline rocks
• Tillites formed during late
Paleozoic era in portions of
the southern continents indicate
that these landmasses were once
joined
– strong evidence supporting
Theory of Plate Tectonics
Chapter 12 graphics- glaciers (1) [Autosaved].ppt

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Chapter 12 graphics- glaciers (1) [Autosaved].ppt

  • 1. Tim Horner CSUS Geology Department Glaciers and Glaciation Physical Geology, Chapter 12
  • 2. Glaciers and Earth’s Systems • A glacier is a large, long-lasting mass of ice, formed on land, that moves downhill under its own weight • Glaciers are part of Earth’s hydrosphere • Along with sea ice, glaciers are known as the cryosphere • About 75% of the world’s supply of fresh water is locked up in glacial ice
  • 3. a long, narrow inlet with steep sides or cliffs, created by a glacier.Fjords ridge of a mountain that protrudes from an ice field or glacier that otherwise covers most of the mountain ...Nunatak Periglacial' describes a landscape that undergoes seasonal freezing and thawing, typically on the fringes of past and present glaciated regions.
  • 4. Formation of Glaciers • Glaciers develop as snow is compacted and recrystallized, first into firn and then glacial ice • A glacier can only form where more snow accumulates during the winter than melts away during the spring and summer • Two types of glaciated terrains on Earth: – Alpine glaciation occurs in mountainous regions in the form of valley glaciers – Continental glaciation covers large land masses in Earth’s polar regions in the form of ice sheets – Glaciation occurs in areas cold enough to allow accumulated snow to persist from year to year
  • 5. Anatomy of a Glacier • An advancing glacier gains more snow than it loses, has a positive budget – End or terminus of glacier advances downslope • A receding glacier has a negative budget – Terminus of glacier shrinks back upslope • Snow is added in the zone of accumulation of glaciers, whereas melting (and calving of icebergs) occurs in the zone of ablation • The equilibrium line, which separates accumulation and ablation zones, will advance or retreat depending on climate
  • 6. Movement of Glaciers • Valley glaciers and ice sheets move downslope under the force of gravity • Movement occurs by basal sliding and plastic flow of the lower part of the glacier, and passive “riding along” of an overlying rigid zone – Crevasses are fractures formed in the upper rigid zone during glacier flow • Due to friction, glacier flow is fastest at the top center of a glacier and slowest along its margins
  • 7. plastic flow (plural plastic flows) (physics) Any fluid flow in which movement is proportional to the applied force (above the yield value). (geology) Any deformation caused by a sustained force. Basal sliding is the act of a glacier sliding over the bed due to meltwater under the ice acting as a lubricant. This movement very much depends on the temperature of the area, the slope of the glacier, the bed roughness, the amount of meltwater from the glacier, and the glacier's size.
  • 8. Glacial Erosion • Glaciers erode underlying rock by plucking of rock fragments and abrasion as they are dragged along – Basal abrasion polishes and striates the underlying rock surface and produces abundant fine rock powder known as rock flour
  • 9. Erosional Landscapes • Erosional landforms produced by valley glaciers include: – U-shaped valleys – Hanging valleys • Smaller tributary glacial valleys left stranded above more quickly eroded central valleys – Cirques • Steep-sided, half-bowl-shaped recesses carved into mountains at the heads of glacial valleys – Arêtes • Sharp ridges separating glacial valleys – Horns • Sharp peaks remaining after cirques have cut back into a mountain on 3+ sides
  • 10. Erosional Landscapes • Erosional landforms produced by valley glaciers include: – U-shaped valleys – Hanging valleys • Smaller tributary glacial valleys left stranded above more quickly eroded central valleys
  • 11. Erosional Landscapes • Erosional landforms produced by valley glaciers include: – Cirques • Steep-sided, half-bowl-shaped recesses carved into mountains at the heads of glacial valley
  • 12. Erosional Landscapes • Erosional landforms produced by valley glaciers include: – Arêtes • Sharp ridges separating glacial valleys – Horns • Sharp peaks remaining after cirques have cut back into a mountain on 3+ sides
  • 13. Glacial Deposition • General name for unsorted, unlayered glacial sediment is till – Deposits of till left behind at the sides and end of a glacier are called lateral, medial and end moraines, respectively • Lateral moraines are elongate, low mounds of till along sides of valley glaciers
  • 14. Glacial Deposition • Medial moraines are lateral moraines trapped between adjacent ice streams • End moraines are ridges of till piled up along the front end of a glacier • Successive end moraines left behind by a retreating glacier are called recessional moraines
  • 15. Glacial Deposition • Large amounts of liquid water flow over, beneath and away from the ice at the end of a glacier • Sediment deposited by this water is known as glacial outwash • Sediment-laden streams emerging from ends of glaciers have braided channel drainage patterns • Outwash landforms include drumlins, eskers, kettles and kames • Annual sediment deposition in glacial lakes produces varves, which can be counted like tree rings
  • 16. Glacial Deposition • Large amounts of liquid water flow over, beneath and away from the ice at the end of a glacier • Sediment deposited by this water is known as glacial outwash • Sediment-laden streams emerging from ends of glaciers have braided channel drainage patterns • Outwash landforms include drumlins, eskers, kettles and kames • Annual sediment deposition in glacial lakes produces varves, which can be counted like tree rings
  • 17. Direct Effects of Past Glaciation • Large-scale glaciation of North America during the most recent ice age produced the following effects: – Most of the soil and sedimentary rocks were scraped off underlying crystalline rock in northern and eastern Canada, and lake basins were gouged out of the bedrock – Extensive sets of recessional moraines were left behind by retreating ice sheets in the upper midwestern U.S. and Canada
  • 18. Indirect Effects of Past Glaciation • Large pluvial lakes (formed in a period of abundant rainfall) existed in closed basins in Utah, Nevada and eastern California – Great Salt Lake is remnant of much larger pluvial Lake Bonneville – Huge floods emanated as ice-dammed lakes (e.g., Lake Missoula) drained catastrophically • Sea level was significantly lowered by large amounts of water locked up into ice sheets, allowing stream channels and glaciers to erode valleys below present- day sea level – Fiords are coastal inlets formed by drowning of glacially carved valleys by rising sea level
  • 19. Evidence for Older Glaciation • Rocks called tillites, lithified glacial till, have distinctive textures that suggest emplacement of sediments by glaciers – Unsorted rock particles including angular, faceted and striated boulders • In some areas, old tillites directly overlie polished and striated crystalline rocks • Tillites formed during late Paleozoic era in portions of the southern continents indicate that these landmasses were once joined – strong evidence supporting Theory of Plate Tectonics