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Chapter 19: Glacial Systems and Landforms Physical Physical Geography Geography Ninth Edition Ninth Edition Robert E. Gabler James. F. Petersen L. Michael Trapasso
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Page 1: Chapter19 glacial systems

Chapter 19: Glacial Systems and Landforms

Physical Physical GeographyGeographyNinth EditionNinth Edition

Robert E. Gabler

James. F. Petersen

L. Michael Trapasso

Dorothy Sack

Page 2: Chapter19 glacial systems

Glacial Systems and Landforms

Page 3: Chapter19 glacial systems

Glacial Systems and Landforms

• Glaciers– Large masses of flowing ice– Glacier’s role

• Climate indicator’s• Long-term storage of fresh water as ice• Hydrologic cycle

– Process of erosion, transportation, and deposition by glaciers leaves a distinctive mark

– Locations:• Alps, Rocky Mountains, Himalayas, Andes

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19.1 Glacier Formation and the Hydrologic Cycle

• Glaciers– Masses of flowing ice that

have accumulated on land– Annual input of frozen

precipitation exceeded yearly loss by melting and other processes

– Snowflakes• Compaction, melting and

refreezing• Firn

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19.1 Glacier Formation and the Hydrologic Cycle

• Glaciers– Open systems with:

• Input• Storage• Output

– Accumulation– Ablation– Sublimation– Calving– Icebergs

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19.1 Glacier Formation and the Hydrologic Cycle

• Glaciers– Controlled by 2 basic

climatic conditions:• Precipitation• Freezing temperatures

– 2.25% of Earth’s total water

– 70% of Earth’s fresh water

– Moves slowly with tremendous energy

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19.2 Types of Glaciers

• Two Major categories– Alpine– Continental

• Alpine (High elevation)– Fed by ice and snow in

mountain areas– Usually occupy

preexisting valleys– Valley glaciers

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19.2 Types of Glaciers

• Alpine (High elevation)– Piedmont glaciers

• Ice flows beyond the valley, spreading out over flatter land

– Cirque glaciers• Smallest type

– Locations:• Rockies, Sierra Nevada,

Cascades, Olympic, Coast Range

• Andes, Himalaya, Mount Kenya and Kilimanjaro

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19.2 Types of Glaciers

• Continental glaciers– Much larger and thicker– High latitude– 2 polar ice sheets

• Greenland

• Antarctica

– Ice capsQ: How is radial ice flow both

similar to and different from the radial drainage pattern observed for some stream systems?

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19.3 How do Glaciers flow?

• Movement Processes– Internal plastic

deformation• Weight of overlying ice,

firn, and snow causes ice crystals at depth to arrange themselves in parallel layers that glide over each other

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19.3 How do Glaciers flow?

• Movement Processes– Processes at base

• Basal sliding– Processes at top

• Brittle ice• Fractures and cracks• Crevasses• Icefalls

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19.4 Glaciers as Geomorphic Agents

• Glaciers remove and entrain rock particles by 2 erosion processes– Plucking

• Moving ice freezes onto loosened rocks, incorporating them into the flow

– Abrasion

Q: How does sediment load of a glacier differ from sediment load of a stream?

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19.5 Alpine Glaciers

• Zone of accumulation (input)• Zone of ablation (ablation exceeds accumulation)

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19.5 Alpine Glaciers

• Equilibrium line (boundary)

Q: What additional information would be needed to assess if the boundary between the white and blue zones on this photo is the glacier’s annual equilibrium line?

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19.5 Alpine Glaciers

• Factors influencing Equilibrium line– Latitude– Elevation– Temperature– Amount of insolation– Mountain slope– Wind

Q: Do any slope characteristics vary by aspect in the region where you live?

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19.5 Alpine Glaciers

• Glacier’s head– Cirque headwall– Bergschrund

• Terminus

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19.5 Alpine Glaciers

• Equilibrium and the Glacial Budget– Changes throughout year– Growing or shrinking:

• Observe terminus• Advance (further down

valley)• Retreat• Most receding since 1890

Page 18: Chapter19 glacial systems

19.5 Alpine Glaciers

• Erosional Landforms of Alpine Glaciation– Striations

• Linear scratches, grooves, and gouges

• Direction of ice flow

Q: Can the direction of ice flow be determined with certainty from the evidence in this photograph?

Page 19: Chapter19 glacial systems

19.5 Alpine Glaciers

• Erosional Landforms of Alpine Glaciation– Roches moutonnées

• Asymmetric bedrock hills or knobs

• Smoothly rounded on the up-side by abrasion

• Plucking on down-ice side

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19.5 Alpine Glaciers

• Erosional Landforms of Alpine Glaciation– Cirque

• Bowls• Cirque lakes

– Arête• Jagged sawtooth-

shaped spine of rock

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19.5 Alpine Glaciers

• Erosional Landforms of Alpine Glaciation– Horn

• 3 or more cirques meet• Pyramid shape• Matterhorn

– Col• Pass formed by

headward erosion of 2 cirques

– Glacial trough

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19.5 Alpine Glaciers

• Erosional Landforms of Alpine Glaciation– Paternoster lakes

• Glacier creates rock steps and excavated basins

• This forms Lake chains

– Fjord• Abandoned glacial

trough that use to extend down to ocean

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19.5 Alpine Glaciers

• Erosional Landforms of Alpine Glaciation– Hanging Valleys

• Waterfall• Yosemite Valley, CA

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19.5 Alpine Glaciers

• Depositional Landforms of Alpine Glaciation– Glaciofluvial– Drift– Moraines– Lateral moraines

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19.5 Alpine Glaciers

• Depositional Landforms of Alpine Glaciation– Medial moraine– End moraine– Terminal moraine– Recessional moraine– Ground moraine– Glacial outwash

Page 26: Chapter19 glacial systems

19.6 Continental Glaciers

• Ice sheets & Ice caps– Convex lens cross

section– Thick in center and

thinning toward edges

Q: How is this manner of ice flow difference from and similar to that of a valley glacier?

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19.6 Continental Glaciers

• Existing Continental Glaciers– Cover about 10% of

Earth– Locations: Iceland,

arctic islands, Greenland ice sheet, and Antarctic Ice Sheet

– Outlet glaciers

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19.6 Continental Glaciers

• Existing Continental Glaciers– Antarctic Ice Sheet

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19.6 Continental Glaciers

• Existing Continental Glaciers– Antarctic Ice Sheet– Ice sheet

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19.6 Continental Glaciers

• Pleistocene Glaciation– Began 2.4 mya and ended 10,000 years ago– Maximum extent: ice covered 1/3 of Earth– Interglacial– Sea level changes

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19.6 Continental Glaciers

• Continental Glaciers and Erosional Landforms– Ice scoured plains

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19.6 Continental Glaciers

• Continental Glaciers and Depositional Landforms– End Moraines– Till Plains– Outwash Plains– Drumlins– Eskers– Kames– Erratics

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19.6 Continental Glaciers

• End Moraines

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19.6 Continental Glaciers

• Till Plains

• Outwash Plains– Kettles– Kettle lakes

• Drumlin

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19.6 Continental Glaciers

• Esker

• Kames– Kame terraces

• Erratics

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19.7 Glacial Lakes

• Pleistocene ice sheets created numerous lake basins– Finger Lakes, NY– Great lakes, US– Lake Chelan, WA– Ice-marginal lakes

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19.7 Glacial Lakes

• Lake Missoula– Scablands– Dry waterfalls

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19.7 Glacial Lakes

• Great Lakes– World’s largest lake system

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19.8 Periglacial Landscapes

• Periglacial environments– High latitudes of N.

hemisphere– Lacking year round ice or

snow undergoing intense frost action

– Frost action• Freezing/thawing of soil• Frost heave and thaw

settlement

– Patterned ground

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19.8 Periglacial Landscapes

• Permafrost– Solifluction– Ice wedge polygons– Construction Techniques

• Build above ground

– Climate Change and permafrost

• Thermokarst development• Release of Carbon Dioxide

and Methane

Page 41: Chapter19 glacial systems

Physical Geography

End of Chapter 19: Glacial Systems and Landforms