Chapter 8 Erosional Forces
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Transcript Chapter 8 Erosional Forces
Chapter 8 Erosional
Forces
Section 8-2 Glaciers
Note Guide
How Glaciers Move and Form
► Snow
remains on the ground year-round in
some areas of the world.
► As snow piles up, the weight increases and
it compresses the lower layers into ice.
► The pressure makes the ice plastic like, so
the mass begins to flow and move away
from its source.
► A large mass of ice and snow moving on
land under its own weight is a glacier.
An Advancing Glacier!
A glacier that has retreated!
Ice Eroding Rock
► Glaciers
are agents of Erosion.
► As glaciers move along the surface of the
Earth, they pick up eroded material and
deposit it somewhere else.
► When glacial ice melts, water flows into the
cracks of rocks. When the water freezes, it
expands and fractures the rock.
► The pieces of rock are lifted out by the ice.
This process is called plucking.
Ice Eroding Rock
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Plucking results in boulders, gravel, and sand being added
to the bottom of glaciers.
Plucked rock fragments and sand at the bottom of a glacier
scrape and scour the soil and bedrock on Earth’s surface
and erode the ground.
Deep, long, parallel scars called grooves are left behind
by rock fragments.
Shallower marks on the bedrock are called striations
Both of these indicate the direction the glacier moved.
Plucking!
Striations
Ice Depositing Sediment
► When
glaciers begin to melt, they deposit
sediment on land.
► When a glacier melts and shrinks back, it is
said to retreat.
► As it retreats, it leaves a jumble of
boulders, sand, silt and clay behind.
► This is called glacial till.
Ice Depositing Sediment
► Till
is also deposited at the end of a glacier
when it is not moving.
► Rocks and soil are moved to the end of the
glacier and piles up in a big ridge.
► This ridge is called a moraine.
Moraines are also deposited along the sides of a
glacier.
Moraine
Till
Outwash and Till
Ice Depositing Sediment
► In
a melting glacier, meltwater forms a
stream within the ice.
► This river carries sand and gravel and
deposits them within its channel.
► When the glacier melts, a winding ridge of
sand and gravel is left behind.
► This is called an esker.
Esker!
2 Types of Glaciers
► Continental
glaciers cover 10% of the
Earth, mostly near Antarctica and
Greenland.
► The continental glaciers are huge masses
of Ice and snow, and are thicker than some
Mountain ranges.
In the past, continental glaciers covered as
much as 28 % of Earth. The periods of
widespread glaciations are known as Ice ages.
2 Types of Glaciers
► Valley glaciers occur today in high mountains
where the average temperature is low enough to
prevent snow from melting in the summer
Evidence that valley glaciers existed in the
mountains includes striations or evidence of
plucking from the top of a mountain where the
glacier was in contact with solid rock.
Valley glaciers erode curved, bowl- shaped
basins, called cirques into the sides of
mountains.
2 Types of Glaciers
If two valley glaciers side by side erode a
mountain, then a long ridge called an Arête
forms between them.
If valley glaciers erode a mountain from several
directions, a horn might form.
2 Types of Glaciers
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To tell the difference between valleys that have been
eroded by glaciers or those that have been eroded by
streams:
Valleys that have been eroded by glaciers are U -shaped.
Valleys that have been eroded by streams are V shaped.
Glaciers are important because they change the Earth’s
surface and they have left behind sediments that are
important resources.
Valley Glacier
Valley Glacier Erosion
Glacier Coverage!