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Glaciers
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What is a glacier? It is a large body of continuously accumulating ice and compacted snow, formed in mountain valleys or at the poles, that deforms under its own weight and slowly moves It is actually a moving river of ice! Synonyms: ice floe, iceberg, ice field, icecap, ice sheet, glacier
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Glaciers Glaciers are made up of fallen snow that, over many years, compresses into large, thickened ice masses. Glaciers form when snow remains in one location long enough to transform into ice. What makes glaciers unique is their ability to move. Due to sheer mass, glaciers flow like very slow rivers. Some glaciers are as small as football fields, while others grow to be over a hundred kilometers long.
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2 Kinds of Glaciers Continental Glacier Valley Glacier
A continental glacier is a huge mass of ice that covers a lot of land near the Arctic or Antarctic polar regions. First a layer of snow falls in one area. After a while more snow falls until the layer is thicker. Each time a new layer of snow falls it adds weight to the glacier. The layers below the top layer begin to squeeze together until most of air is squeezed out from between the particles of snow. At this point ice forms from the crushed snow. So, the lower ice layers in a glacier are thinner and denser than the layers toward the top of the glacier. This process has gone on for millions of years. Valley glaciers are found in mountain regions all around the world. A Valley glacier begins at the top of the mountain and slowly scrapes creating a U-shaped valley. The glacier is so heavy at the top that it begins to move slowly down the mountain. The glacial ice builds up year after year until the ice is so thick that the bottom layer melts a little and mixes with dirt and soil. This forms a slick layer that makes it easy for the glacier to move as gravity pulls it from the top of the mountain. As gravity pulls the glacier slowly down the mountain, new snow falls to replace the glacier at the top of the mountain. As a glacier moves down the valley it scrapes along the sides and bottom of the valley that is already there. It picks up boulders and sediments and takes them down the mountain. Valley glaciers cause a lot of damage to the land that it passes over and makes many new landforms.
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Where can glaciers be found?
An Ice Age occurs when cool temperatures endure for extended periods of time, allowing polar ice to advance into lower latitudes. For example, during the last Ice Age, giant glacial ice sheets extended from the poles to cover most of Canada, all of New England, much of the upper Midwest, large areas of Alaska, most of Greenland, Iceland, Svalbard and other arctic islands, Scandinavia, much of Great Britain and Ireland, and the northwestern part of the former Soviet Union. Glaciers can be thought as remnants from the last Ice Age, when ice covered nearly 32 percent of the land, and 30 percent of the oceans.
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Glaciers Presently, 10% of land area is covered with glaciers.
Glaciers store about 75% of the world's freshwater. If all land ice melted, sea level would rise approximately 70 meters worldwide.
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Why does glacial ice sometimes appear blue?
Glacial ice often appears blue when it has become very dense. Years of compression gradually make the ice denser over time, forcing out the tiny air pockets between crystals. When glacier ice becomes extremely dense, the ice absorbs all other colors in the spectrum and reflects primarily blue, which is what we see. When glacier ice is white, that usually means that there are many tiny air bubbles still in the ice.
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North America's longest glacier is the Bering Glacier in Alaska, measuring 204 kilometers long.
In Washington state alone, glaciers provide 470 billion gallons of water each summer. Almost 90% of an iceberg is below water--only about 10% shows above water. Have you ever heard of the term “just the tip of the iceberg”?
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U Shaped vs. V Shaped Valley
U Shaped Valley V Shaped Valley Glaciers reshape the river pathway into a U-shaped valley. V-shaped valleys are carved by rivers as they pass over the land
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Glacial Erosion Valley glaciers erode in two different ways, by plucking and abrasion. Plucking happens when materials are picked up by the moving glacier and moved from the place that it has been for centuries. The materials that are picked up by plucking are either laying on the ground, or they are broken or fractured off of the side of a mountain. During abrasion smaller particles act like large pieces of sand paper and cause grooves to be carved into the land. The surfaces of rocks are polished as the glacier moves across it.
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Erratics Erratic's are boulders that the glacier has carried along with it as it moved. Some eratics fall onto a glacier during an avalanche and ride on the top of the glacier until it melts. When the glacier melts it leaves the boulder far away from where it first fell. Sometimes smaller boulders that are already on the ground when the glacier passes, and the glacier just picks it up and moves it too.
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