What is a Glacier? Types of Glaciers

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1 Alpine & Continental Glaciers Glacial Mass Balance Glacial Ice Formation Glacial Movement & Erosion Erosional and Depositional Landforms The Pleistocene Epoch Geomorphology of SW Manitoba Chapter 17 1 What is a Glacier? Mass of snow and ice: existing throughout the year evidence of movement Grows: Shrinks: Moves: 2 Two basic types: Types of Glaciers Alpine and Continental Differ in terms of:

2 Rivers and Sheets of Ice 4 Glacial Ice in Canada 5 Alpine Glaciers Located in mountainous regions Form at elevation above the snowline Movement is: 6 2

3 Valley Glaciers Columbia Icefield, B.C.-Alberta 7 Cirque Glacier 8 Cirque Basin 9 3

4 Valley and Tidal Glaciers west coast B.C., Alaska 10 Piedmont Glacier location unknown 11 Continental Glaciers Large continuous mass of glacial ice, regardless of location, is referred to as a continental glacier Come in different sizes: Largest - ice sheet (>50,000 km 2 ) Smaller - ice cap (<50,000 km 2 ) If mountain tops are visible called ice field Movement controlled by: 12 4

5 Ice Sheets, Caps, and Fields 13 Outlet Glacier 14 Glacial Ice Formation Accumulation of snow and ice, thick layers Weight increased pressure at depth Pressure melting point at depth is reduced Snow Gr. Snow Firn Imp.GIce Tr. GIce Behaves as a plastic under pressure - flows Process takes from a few yrs to thousands of yrs 15 5

6 Glacial Ice Formation Material Structure Density Snow hexagonal ice crystals and trapped air 0.02 g/cm 3 Ne've'/Firn granular ice crystals separated by air voids 0.5 g/cm 3 Impure glacial ice solid ice containing trapped air bubbles 0.8 g/cm 3 True glacial ice solid ice with no air bubbles 0.9 g/cm 3 16 Glacial Mass Balance Accumulation = Precip. (all forms), snow avalanches

7 Glacial Mass Balance Ablation = snowmelt sublimation, deflation, and calving Glacial Advance or Retreat? Glaciers advance/grow when: Precip. and/or temperatures Causing accumulation and/or ablation Equilibrium line shifts towards terminus; the glacier advances Glaciers retreat/shrink when: Precip. and/or temperatures Causing accumulation and/or ablation Equilibrium line shifts towards accumulation zone; the glacier retreats 21 7

8 Advance or Retreat? Movement of glacial ice is NOT necessarily coincident with advance or retreat of the terminus. Ice may be moving even when the terminus is stationary, advancing, or retreating 22 Rate of movement depends on: 1. Rate of 2. Slope of 3. Slope of 4. Temperature of 5. Presence of at base Rate varies - metres/day to cm/year Faster near, along Slowest near and due to Glacial Movement 23 Three mechanisms of movement: 1) Basal Sliding Glacial Movement 2) Plastic Flow 3) Shearing 24 8

9 Ice Regelation and Plucking Due to pressure changes at base of glacier Three processes account for the majority of glacial erosion: 1) Plucking w/ ice regelation Glacial Erosion 2) Abrasion polishing, scouring, striations, grooves 3) Bulldozing glaciotectonic features 27 9

10

11 Erosional Landforms Created by Alpine Glaciation Glaciation typically removes soil and regolith, eroding down to bedrock 31 Postglacial Alpine Landscape & Resulting Erosional Landforms Identify and describe cirque basins, cols, horns, aretes, tarns, hanging and u-shaped valleys, paternoster lakes, fjords

12 34 35 Depositional Landforms Created by Alpine or Continental Glaciation by ice till drift diamict? by water outwash 36 12

13 Depositional Landforms Created by Alpine or Continental Glaciation Moraines Accumulations of till (unsorted material) Terminal or end moraines; advance = ablation Sequence of end moraines referred to as washboard or recessional moraines Lateral vs. Medial Moraines (alpine) Animation Terminal and Recessional Moraines

14

15 Depositional Landforms Created by Alpine or Continental Glaciation Glaciofluvial deposits (sorted material) Glaciers develop extensive drainage systems in the ablation zone on = Animation Outwash within = and beneath = Sediment laden runoff deposits an in a process analogous to the development of a delta or alluvial fan

16

17 Depositional Landforms Created by Continental Glaciation Ablation of stagnant ice; = till plain Deposition of glaciofluvial seds; = inverted topography after ice melts Subglacial fluvial deposits result in long sinuous ridges called Supraglacial lake deposits result in hills called Blocks of clean ice result in subsidence and depressions called 49 Erosional and Depositional Landforms Created by Continental Glaciation Two general types of streamlined features: Roche Moutonnee gentle intercepting slope, steep leeward slope Drumlins - steep intercepting slope, gentle leeward slope 50 Deposition by Continental Glaciers 51 17

18 Pleistocene Glaciation 52 Mechanisms of Climate Fluctuation 53 Animation Wisconsinan Deglaciation 54 18

19 Glacial Lakes and Spillways

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