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Glacier Erosion  A glacier is a large, moving mass of ice that are found in either high elevations or near the poles.  A very large portion of Canada’s.

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Presentation on theme: "Glacier Erosion  A glacier is a large, moving mass of ice that are found in either high elevations or near the poles.  A very large portion of Canada’s."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Glacier Erosion  A glacier is a large, moving mass of ice that are found in either high elevations or near the poles.  A very large portion of Canada’s landforms and sediments are primarily glacial in origin.

3 Factors Affecting Glacier Erosion 1. The rock fragments or abrasives that their base that are used to scrape the underlying bedrock. Larger rocks are better abrasives.

4 Factors Affecting Glacier Erosion 1. The amount of water under the ice sheet. Water acts as a lubricant that increases the speed of the ice sheet. The faster it moves, the more erosion occurs.

5 Factors Affecting Glacier Erosion 1. The downward force of the abrasives on the bedrock.

6 Warm Ice versus Cold Ice  Warm Ice – Ice that is around the freezing point. Mountain glaciers contain this type of ice. It contains liquid water, moves quickly and is very erosive.

7 Warm Ice versus Cold Ice  Cold Ice – Ice that is well below the freezing point. It does not contain liquid water and accumulates snow very slowly. This ice is found near the poles.

8 Types of Glaciers 1. Continental Glaciers Huge glaciers that cover a large area (polar regions). Thickest at the centre. Movement is in all directions away from the centre.

9 Types of Glaciers 2. Valley Glaciers Glaciers that form in mountainous regions. Snow accumulates at the highest point and then flows down the mountain due to gravity.

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11 Geological Feature Created by Glaciers 1. Kettle Lake A shaped depression formed when a large block of glacial ice breaks away from the main glacier and is buried beneath glacial till, then melts. If the depression fills with water, it is known as a kettle lake

12  Kettle Lakes in Ontario – Puslinch Lake

13 Geological Feature Created by Glaciers 2. Erratics These are rock fragments carried by ice from their place of origin and left in an area where there is a different type of bedrock. These are important for scientists because they help chart the movement of ancient ice sheets.

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15 Results of Glacial Erosion 3. Moraines  These are ridges or mounds of glacial material deposited at, or close to, the ice margins.  Horseshoe Valley is a moraine.  They tell scientist how far an ice sheet reached.

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18 Results of Glacial Erosion 4. Drumlins  A oval shaped hills that are formed from glacial till. They are 15 to 40 m in height and have a length to width ratio of 1:2.

19 Results of Glacial Erosion 5. Fjords or Sounds  A glacial valley that has been invaded by water from a large body of water like a lake or ocean.  Sounds (Like Owen Sound) are bigger than Fjords.

20 Mountain Features created by Glacial Erosion 6. Cirques  Deep depressions in the mountains that have been hollowed out by glaciers.

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23 Mountain Features created by Glacial Erosion 7. Aretes  A sharp-edged ridge of rock formed between adjacent cirques.

24 Mountain Features created by Glacial Erosion 8. Horn  A high mountain peak that forms when the walls of three or more glacial cirques meet.  The Matter Horn

25 Mountain Features created by Glacial Erosion 9. Tarn  A small lake that fills the central depression of a cirque.  Lake Louise in Banff

26 Alpine Glacier Erosion 10. Glacial Valley  Glacial valleys have a u-shape cross section. They are step sided valleys cut by fast moving, warm ice.

27 Ireland Country Side

28 Homework  p. 203 #1-5  P. 206 – the four questions.


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