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Glaciers & Ice Ages

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Page 1: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Glaciers & Ice Ages

Page 2: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Glaciers• Valley or Alpine glaciers

• Form in mountainous areas• Move downslope in valleys

• Ice sheets• Move outward from center

• Continental glaciers - large scale, “ice age” type. Presently found only in Greenland & Antarctica.

• Ice caps - similar to but smaller than continental glaciers. Found in Iceland & elsewhere.

• Piedmont - “foot of the mountain” glaciers.

Page 3: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

The only present-day continental ice sheets are those covering Greenland and Antarctica. Their combined areas represent almost 10 percent of Earth’s land area. Greenland’s ice sheet occupies 1.7 million square kilometers, or about 80 percent of the island. The area of the Antarctic Ice Sheet is almost 14 million square kilometers. Ice shelves occupy an additional 1.4 million square kilometers adjacent to the Antarctic Ice Sheet.

Page 4: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Glacial movement• Slippage

• Lubricated by water & mud• Plastic flow

• Below about 50m, ice will flow due to pressure• Top 50m - zone of fracture - crevasses• Movement may be very slow to several

meters/day• Movement can be variable - “surging”

Page 5: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly
Page 6: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Ice movement and changes in the terminus at Rhone Glacier, Switzerland.

Page 7: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Greenland Glacier Photo by Dr. Sharon Johnson, University of California, Berkeley

Page 8: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

• Zone of Accumulation• Where annual snowfall exceeds annual melting• Glaciers form only on land

• Zone of Wastage (or ablation)• Where rate of melting at least equals advance

of ice• Flow is always downslope (valley glaciers) or

outward from zone of accumulation (ice sheets).• Icebergs form where glaciers end at the sea.

Page 9: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

The snowline separates the zone of accumulation and the zone of wastage. Above the snowline, more snow falls each winter than melts each summer. Below the snowline, the snow from the previous winter completely melts as does some of the underlying ice.

Whether the margin of a glacier advances, retreats, or remains stationary depends on the balance between accumulation and wastage (ablation). When a glacier moves across irregular terrain, crevasses form in the brittle portion.

Page 10: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Glacial Erosion• Glacial plucking

• fragments of bedrock are frozen into the sole of the glacier & plucked out

• Abrasion• Rock flour (loess)• Glacial striations• Glacial polish

Page 11: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Valley glacier erosional features

Page 12: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Photo by Dr. Sharon Johnson University of California,

Berkeley

Horn

Page 13: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Photo by Dr. Sharon Johnson University of California,

Berkeley

CirqueA bowl-shaped depression formed at the zone of accumulation by glacial erosion

Page 14: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

AretePhoto by Dr. Sharon Johnson, University of California, Berkeley

Page 15: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

U-shaped glaciated valley, Sierra Nevada, CAPhoto by Dr. Sharon Johnson, University of California, Berkeley

Page 16: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Yosemite Valley, CA - Glaciated valley with hanging valleys

Photo by Dr. Sharon Johnson, University of California, Berkeley

Page 17: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Glacial striations (grooves) in limestone bedrock, Upper Peninsula of Michigan

Photo © Jay Sinclair 1990

Page 18: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Roche moutonnee with striations, Marquette, Michigan

Photo © Jay Sinclair 1990

Page 19: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Photo © Jay Sinclair 1990

Page 20: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Photo © Jay Sinclair 1990

Page 21: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly
Page 22: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Glacial Deposition (drift)• Till - unsorted drift deposited directly by

melting glacier• Glacial erratics• Moraines

• End, terminal, & recessional• Ground moraines• Drumlins

• In valley glaciers:• Lateral • Medial

Page 23: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly
Page 24: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Moraine and outwash plain, Little Souix, Iowa

Photo © Jay Sinclair 2002

Page 25: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Banner Peak, CAGlaciated mountain with horn, cirques, U-shaped valley, and erratics

Photo by Dr. Sharon Johnson, University of California, Berkeley

Page 26: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Erratics in transport on glacier surfacePhoto by Dr. Sharon Johnson, University of California, Berkeley

Page 27: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Medial morainePhoto by Dr. Sharon Johnson, University of California, Berkeley

Page 28: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Photo by Dr. Sharon Johnson University of California,

Berkeley

Cirque & Moraines

Page 29: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Drumlins are streamlined hills formed of till. They form as a glacier advances over existing till.

Photo: T. Poulton, Natural Resources Canada

Page 30: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Glacial Deposition (drift)• Stratified drift (outwash) - sorted by

flowing water• Outwash plain - water flowing away from glacier• Kettles - blocks of ice surrounded by drift• Kames - water flowing down into glacier• Eskers - streams under glacier

Page 31: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly
Page 32: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Kame, Ladd, Illinois

Photo © Jay Sinclair 2002

Page 33: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Esker, Tawas, Michigan

Photo © Jay Sinclair 2002

Page 34: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Esker, Nova Scotia, Canada

Photo: Nova Scotia Department of Natural Resources

Page 35: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Ice Ages - Pleistocene Epoch• Several advances & retreats of ice over

last 2 million or so years, each cycle lasting on average about 100,000 years. Most notable advances in N. America:• Wisconsinan• Illinoian• Kansan• Nebraskan

Page 36: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly
Page 37: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Effects of Pleistocene Ice Ages

• Changed drainage of N. America to present pattern (Mississippi)

• Isostatic changes - crust was pushed down, now rising

• Pluvial lakes resulting from increased rainfall (Lake Bonneville)

• Changes in sea level - larger amount of the Earth’s water frozen, resulting in lower sea levels

Page 38: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly
Page 39: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly
Page 40: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Pluvial lakes of the Western United States. (After R. F. Flint, Glacial and Quaternary Geology, New York: John Wiley & Sons)

Page 41: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly
Page 42: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Major moraine systems of the Great Lakes region

Page 43: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Causes of Ice Ages• Plate tectonics - continents move toward

poles• Land masses must be present in order for

glaciers to form• Movement of land masses may disrupt ocean

currents which serve to moderate temperatures in polar regions

• Variations in Earth’s tilt/orbit• “Stretching” of orbit - 100,000 year cycle• Change of tilt - 41,000 year cycle• Precession or “wobble” - 26,000 year cycle

Page 44: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly
Page 45: Glaciers & Ice Ages - Weebly

Causes of Ice Ages• Changes in sunspot cycle?

• Sunspots normally vary in number over an 11 year cycle.

• During the “Maunder Minimum” (ca. 1645 - 1715) there were almost no sunspots. This corresponded to the so-called “Little Ice Age” in Europe and North America, during which severe winters caused famine and hardship. This and other evidence suggests that sunspot activity increases the energy output of the sun. A decrease in sunspots, combined with other factors, might trigger an ice age.