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Chapter 12 Glaciers and Glaciation

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Title: Chapter 12 Glaciers and Glaciation


1
Chapter 12Glaciers and Glaciation
Photo credit G. Mattioli
2
Glaciers and Glaciation Topics
  • Glaciers
  • Global Distribution
  • Mechanisms of Formation
  • How and Why They Move
  • The Theory of Glacial Ages - Louis Agassiz, 1837
  • Profound Changes in Global Climate
  • Related to Changes in Orbital Characteristics
  • Changes in Global Sea Level
  • Post-glacial Uplift

3
Modern Glacier Distribution
  • Mostly limited to Polar Regions
  • Northern Hemisphere Sea Ice Pack is seasonal and
    ephemeral
  • Greenland Ice Sheet is permanent (10)
  • Antarctic Ice Sheet is permanent (85)
  • Remaing Alpine glaciers amount to only 5
  • Most of the Earths freshwater is bound up in
    Antarctic Ice Sheet
  • 2 of total global water budget

4
Northern Hemisphere Polar Ice
NASA/CSA Resources - Composite radar image draped
on visible image
Image source NASA Jet Propulsion Lab
5
Arctic Sea Ice Growth
Baufort Sea, north of the Alaskan coast
Images taken 9 days apart. RadarSAT scenes are 60
x 80 miles. Brighter features are older ice and
darker features are newly formed ice.
6
Glacial Characteristics
  • Distribution of Glaciers
  • Types of Glaciers
  • Continental Ice Sheets
  • Alpine
  • Formation and Growth of Glaciers
  • Movement of Valley Glaciers
  • Movement of Ice Sheets

7
Modern Valley Glacier
8
Yosemite Valley
9
Valley Glacier Zones
Zone of ablation
10
Valley Glacier Formation - Seasonal Variation
11
Receding South Cascade Glacier
1957
1980
Loss of 18.7 M m3 of ice - Due to global warming?
Photo credits U.S. Geological Survey
12
Snow to Ice
13
Polycrystalline Ice in Polarized Light
Individual Ice Crystals
14
LANDSAT Composite Antarctica
Highest Point
15
Continental Ice Sheet Development
16
South Pole
Pole erected 1956 - Movement of Ice Sheet has
displaced it from current geographic south pole
several km away!
17
Icebergs
18
Meteorite Accumulation
19
Glacial Movement - Mechanisms
20
Glacier Movement Animation
Note that velocity is NOT constant with depth
nor is the mechanism that allows the ice to move!
21
Glacial Crevasses
22
Crevasse Formation Animation
23
Glacial Erosion
  • Erosional Landscapes Associated with Alpine
    Glaciation
  • Erosional Landscapes Associated with Continental
    Glaciation  

24
Glacial Erosion Striations
25
Alpine Glacial Landforms
26
Alpine Glacial Features - Grand Teton
Horn
U-shaped Valley
27
Arete - Mt. Logan, Yukon Territory
28
Hanging Rivers - U shaped Valley
29
Bedrock Fractures and Glacial Erosion
30
Glacial Cirque
31
Crevasse Development
32
Striated Bedrock
South Australian Paleozoic Glaciation
33
Roche Moutonée with Striae
34
Glacially Scoured Terrain, Canadian Arctic
35
Glacial Deposition
  • Moraines
  • Outwash
  • Glacial Lakes and Varves 

36
Alpine Moraines and Till
37
Moraine Types
38
Lateral and Medial Moraines
39
Glacial Valley Landforms
40
Glacial Outwash Features
41
Outwash Features
42
Varved Sediments
Seasonal Deposition Light color silt
(summer) Dark color clay (winter)
43
Effects of Past Glaciation - 1
  • The Glacial Ages
  • Occur repeatedly through geologic time
  • Most recent period initiated 3 Ma ago and peaked
    18 Ka ago
  • Antarctica has been glaciated for 20 Ma
  • Direct Effects of Past Glaciation in North
    America
  • Great Lakes, Finger Lakes
  • Terminal Moraines, Drumlins
  • Glacial Erratics - odd rocks from northern craton

44
Drumlin and Glacial Erratic
Flow Direction
Teardrop-shaped
Images from http//mail.rochester.edu/kl001i/lan
derk2.html
45
Effects of Past Glaciation - 2
  • Indirect Effects of Past Glaciation
  • Pluvial Lakes
  • Lower Sea Level - Submerged Canyons on the Shelf
  • Coastal Fiords
  • Crustal Rebound
  • Evidence for Older Glaciation
  • Tillites (lithified glacial till)
  • Evidence for Continental Drift and Plate
    Tectonics
  • Snowball Earth hypothesis - cold, ancient Earth
    due to weaker sun, lower CO2

46
Pleistocene Glaciation
47
Maximum Extent of Pleistocene Glaciers
48
Finger Lakes - Western NY
49
Lake Missoula, MT
Giant ripples of gravel - formed when glacial
lake emptied
50
Inland Passage - Alaska
51
Mechanisms for Past Glacial Periods
  • Pleistocene glacial and interglacial episodes are
    correlated with variations in the Earths orbit
    at 21 ka, 41 ka, and 100 ka. Discovered by M.
    Milankovitch in 1921.
  • General absence of glacial periods in the past is
    NOT explained by Milankovitch cycles.
  • Other mechanisms
  • Changes in CO2 content in the atmosphere (large
    volcanic eruptions can lower global temperature).
  • Movement of the continental landmasses by
    tectonics.
  • Changes in oceanic circulation as a result of
    both atmospheric and tectonic processes.

52
Milankovitch Cycles in Earths Orbit
Image Source Scott Rutherford
53
Snowball Earth Carbon Cycle
Figure from Hoffman and Schrag (1999)
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