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1.4 Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental Glaciation
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1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Dec 28, 2015

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Nigel Randall
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Page 1: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

1.4 Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2)

There are two types of glaciation.

1. Alpine Glaciation

2. Continental Glaciation

Page 2: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

1.6.1 Distinguish between the terms alpine glaciation and continental glaciation. (P.32)

Alpine Glaciers = form high in mountain

valleys above the snow-line

Continental Glaciers= cover parts of

continental land masses near poles; eg Greenland & Antarctica

Page 3: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Similarities & Differences between Alpine & Continental Glaciation

Similarities Both move (gravity, friction) Both cause erosion in 3 ways

– Bulldozing– Glacial striations– Freeze-n-pluck

Both change the landscape (denudes, deposits)

Both developed in constantly cold < 0 0C

Differences Location

– Alpine = mountain– Continental = earth poles

Size– Alpine = smaller– Continental = larger

Types of features formed (see next slides)

Page 4: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Erosion

Top:glacial polish or striations

Bottom show ice blocks part of freeze-n-pluck. Ice gets burried up when depressions left as material is removed. Leaves small ponds like at Butterpot Park)

Page 5: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Glaciers of the world

Continental glaciers

Alpine Glaciers

Page 6: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Surface of a glacier

Below, Torgat Mtns Lab Side, Alaska

Page 7: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

1. Continental Glaciation

Define the terms a) outwash plain

b) terminal moraine

c) erratics

d) drumlins e) eskers.

See this picture p. 34 & question #12 on p.33-34

Page 8: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

a) Outwash Plain

Outwash plain= Melt water flowing from glacier

deposits silt like river deltas Deposited in layers Small particles carried further away

(lightest) Larger particles drop closer to the

glacier (heaviest) Letter? B

Outwash plain

Page 9: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

b) Terminal Moraine

Terminal Moraine Heap or ridge of bulldozed gravel that

marks the end of the forward motion of a glacier

**Think of loads of dirt dumped by a dump truck

This bulldozing happens at the snout. Letter for snout?

E As glacier retreats it deposits

debris/gravel in ridge perpendicular to flow

Letter for moraine? C

Page 10: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

c) Erratics

Erratics = Large boulders that were

transported long distances and dropped

They now sit in a region and look very much out-of-place.

Letter? H

Page 11: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

d) Drumlins

Drumlins (copy my diagram from board) Egg shaped hill Formed under glaciers Sloped or Pointy end points in direction

of ice flow Formation

– Glacier retreats as ice melts– Deposits of gravel made– Glacier moves forward 2nd time– Deposits are bull-dozed along and

catches up in rough areas forming piles or drumlins.

Letter? G

Page 12: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

e) Eskers

Eskers= Long deposits of eroded

glacial material Formed by sub-glacial streams

that deposit material like all rivers.

Parallel with glacier flow Highways of the North!! Letter? F

Page 13: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Examine evidence for the direction of movement of glaciers. (P. 34 question # 13)

Evidence for direction of movement?

1. Sloped end of drumlin**

2. Location of terminal moraine (could be from 2 directions)

3. Eskers (only tells axis)

What is direction of glacier movement in this picture?

Page 14: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Identify the following continental features. (1)

Drumlin in Alberta Drumlins may rise

to elevations exceeding 30 m and extend, at least, to lengths of 800 m.

This feature shown above is about 35 m high, and at least 250 m long.

In which direction did the glacier travel?

Page 15: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Identify the following continental features.(2)

Esker, NWT

In which direction did the glacier travel?

Page 16: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Identify the following continental features.(3)

Glacial delta at Hermitage, Hermitage Peninsula.

The great mass of sand and gravel on which the village is situated was deposited at the margin of a glacier which, during the final retreat of the Newfoundland ice sheet, stagnated in Hermitage Bay on the north side of the peninsula. At that time the sea stood more than 20 m higher and the meltwater from the glacier built a large flat-topped delta and terrace. Depressions in the gravel mass (kettles) formed as blocks of buried glacier ice melted.

Page 17: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Identify the following continental features.(4)

Drumlin in Burgeo

Page 18: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Identify the following continental features.(5)

Erratic in Labrador

Page 19: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Identify the following continental features.(6)

See long thin lines of deposits?

Eskers or glacial river deposits

A common sight on transatlantic flights, the narrow sinuous branching ridges are eskers composed of gravel and sand that was deposited by glacial meltwater in tunnels beneath an ice sheet.

Page 20: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Alpine glaciers

Alpine glaciers are like very slow moving rivers of ice flowing down high mountain valleys.

Page 21: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

2. Alpine Glaciation

Define the terms

a) cirque,

b) arête,

c) hanging valley

d) Lateral & medial moraine

e) terminal moraine.

• Read pages 34-7, see diagram page 36, chart page 37 & question #14 page 36

Page 22: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

a) Cirque

Cirque = a circular hollow cut into

bedrock during glaciation Side and back walls are steep

but front wall opens downward

Cirque Formation Alpine glacier freezes onto

mountain valley and as is proceeds it plucks rock from the mountain top leaving the cirque shape.

Page 23: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

b) Arête

Arête= Steep knife edged ridge

between two cirques in a mountainous region.

Page 24: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

c) Hanging Valley

Hanging Valley = A high level tributary

valley from which the ground falls sharply to the level of the lower, main valley.

The depth of the lower valley is due to more severe glaciation.

Page 25: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

d) Lateral/Medial Moraine & (e) Terminal Moraine

Lateral Moraines = Landform deposited at the

side of a glacierMedial Moraines=

• Where 2 lateral moraines join when 2 glaciers meet

Terminal Moraines = deposits that mark the

farthest extent of the glacier

•Lateral Moraines

•Terminal Moraine

Page 26: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Describe how fiords are formed. (P.37)

1. Alpine Glaciers erode troughs & valleys in the mountain (at weakest points)

2. Glacier valley reaches the

coast.3. Glacier melts and sea water

floods the valley

4. In case of Western Brook Pond, Gros Morne, coast was “drowned” and when ice melted land rebounded cutting off fiords form ocean.

Page 27: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Name the alpine feature? (1)

See the black lines in the middle of the ice itself

Medial moraine

Page 28: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Name the alpine feature? (2)

See the sharp ridges

Cirques

Page 29: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Name the alpine features? (3 & 4)

Now covered in vegetation Name? CIRQUE

•Erratic (continental feature)

Page 30: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Name the Alpine feature? (5)

Right: Hanging Valley at Trout River Pond in Gros Morne National park .

Left: Hanging valleys in Western Brook Pond (see next slide)

Page 31: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Aerial view of Western Brook trough, Newfoundland

This great chasm cuts the margin of the flat plateau called the Long Range Mountains.

This gorge originated simply as a normal river valley that drained the plateau while it was near sea level in preglacial time.

As the plateau was raised by crustal uplift and the ice age began, the valley was progressively deepened and widened by powerful outlet glaciers, which drained a local ice cap.

Page 32: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Name the Alpine feature? (6)

1. Norway is well known for its abundant fiords

2. Fiord: Bakers Brook Pond, Gros Morne

Page 33: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Name the Alpine feature? (7)

Center arrow? Terminal moraine

Outside arrows? Lateral moraines

Page 34: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Photo Gallery

Page 35: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Photo Gallery

Page 36: 1.4Understand how moving ice acts as an agent of erosion and deposition. (Chapter 2) There are two types of glaciation. 1. Alpine Glaciation 2. Continental.

Glaciers done!

Now complete xword & related sheets