Alpine & Continental Glaciers Glacial Mass Balance Glacial Ice … · 2017. 11. 29. · Alpine & Continental Glaciers Glacial Mass Balance Glacial Ice Formation Glacial Movement &

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1

Chapter 17

Alpine & Continental Glaciers

Glacial Mass Balance

Glacial Ice Formation

Glacial Movement & Erosion

Erosional and Depositional Landforms

The Pleistocene Epoch

Geomorphology of SW Manitoba

1

What is a Glacier?

Mass of snow and ice:

existing throughout the year

evidence of movement

Grows:

Shrinks:

Moves:

2

Types of Glaciers

Two basic types:

Alpine and Continental

Differ in terms of:

1.

2.

3.

4.

3

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

3

Columbia

Icefield,

B.C.-Alberta

Valley Glaciers

7

Cirque Glacier

8

Cirque Basin

9

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 km2)

• Smaller - ice cap (<50,000 km2)

• If mountain tops are visible called

ice field

• Movement controlled by:

____________________________12

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

6

Glacial Ice

Formation

Material Structure Density

Snow hexagonal ice crystals and trapped air 0.02 g/cm3

Ne've'/Firn granular ice crystals separated by air voids 0.5 g/cm3

Impure glacial ice solid ice containing trapped air bubbles 0.8 g/cm3

True glacial ice solid ice with no air bubbles 0.9 g/cm3

16

Glacial Mass Balance

Accumulation = Precip. (all forms), snow avalanches17

18

7

Glacial Mass Balance

Ablation = snowmelt sublimation, deflation, and calving19

20

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

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

retreating22

Glacial Movement

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 ____________________

23

Glacial Movement

Three mechanisms of movement:

1) Basal Sliding

2) Plastic Flow

3) Shearing

24

9

Ice Regelation and Plucking

Due to pressure changes at base of glacier 25

26

Glacial ErosionThree processes account for the

majority of glacial erosion:

1) Plucking

w/ ice regelation

2) Abrasion

polishing, scouring,

striations, grooves

3) Bulldozing

glaciotectonic features

27

10

28

29

30

11

Erosional

Landforms

Created

by Alpine

Glaciation

Glaciation typically removes soil and regolith, eroding down to bedrock31

Postglacial

Alpine

Landscape

& Resulting

Erosional

Landforms

Identify and describe cirque basins, cols, horns, aretes, tarns, hanging

and u-shaped valleys, paternoster lakes, fjords 32

33

12

34

35

Depositional Landforms

Created by Alpine or

Continental Glaciation

drift

till outwash

diamict

?

by ice by water

36

13

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)

Depositional Landforms Created by

Alpine or Continental Glaciation

Animation –Terminal and Recessional Moraines

37

38

39

14

40

41

42

15

Glaciofluvial deposits (sorted material)

Glaciers develop extensive drainage systems in

the ablation zone

on = _______________

within = _____________

and beneath = _____________

Sediment laden runoff deposits an _______

_________ in a process analogous to the

development of a delta or alluvial fan

Depositional Landforms Created by

Alpine or Continental Glaciation

Animation – Outwash

43

44

45

16

46

47

48

17

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 ____________________

Depositional Landforms Created by

Continental Glaciation

49

Two general types of streamlined features:

Roche Moutonnee – __________________

gentle intercepting slope, steep leeward slope

Drumlins - _______________________

steep intercepting slope, gentle leeward slope

Erosional and Depositional Landforms

Created by Continental Glaciation

50

Deposition by

Continental

Glaciers

51

18

Pleistocene Glaciation

52

Mechanisms of

Climate

Fluctuation

53

Animation – Wisconsinan Deglaciation54

19

Glacial Lakes and Spillways

55

56

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