Title: Surface Processes weathering, mass wasting, erosion, deposition
1Surface Processesweathering, mass wasting,
erosion, deposition
2GLACIER MOVEMENTSIMILARITIES
- Alpine and continental glaciers are the same
in the way in which the ice moves ----- - It is like a slow conveyer belt. Snow enters
the glacier at the top or head, becomes compacted
and eventually converted to ice. Ice under
pressure will flow. - Alpine glaciers flow down hill continental
glaciers flow from thick areas to thin areas.
3DIFFERENCES ALPINE VS. CONTINENTAL
- Alpine glaciers leave very rugged sharp peaks
- Continental glaciated leave rounded and flat
areas
4Alpine glacier- Alaska
5Alpine/valley glacier Alaska
6Alpine glacier Mt. Rainier
7Continental glacier Mt. Katadin ME rounded
mountain top
8Glacier - Alaska
9TYPES OF GLACIAL MATERIAL I
- A. SORTED
- WATER deposited (glacial-lacustrine)
- Ex. Kames, eskers (geomorphic
features) - Outwash plains
- WIND deposited sediments near the ice
margins - Ex. Loess deposits
10DEPOSITIONAL FEATURES OF GLACIERS ( NAMES of
FEATURES)
- Moraines- end, lateral, recessional, ground,
interlobate --- piles of unsorted material - Kames- delta, terrace, moulin---mounds of sorted
material - Eskers--- long snake like features of sorted
material - Outwash plains---- flat expanses of fine material
washed from the base of a glacier
11Glacial processes and features applied to
continental glaciers
12Depositional features of Continental glaciers
13(No Transcript)
14Glacial Ice Alaska
15Alpine Glacier-Mt Rainier
16Glacial-Fluvial (Kame) deposit Germantown WI
17Braided stream- at terminus of glacier
18Moulin Kame-Pike Lake WI
19Formation of one type of Kame
20Holy Hill WI - Moulin Kame
21Myra Esker near West Bend WI
22Kettle Moraine Area
23Gilbert lake WI Cobblestone House
24TYPES OF GLACIAL MATERIAL II
- B. UNSORTED GLACIAL MATERIAL
- Indicates direct contact with ice, moved by the
ice - Ex. Till ---- which makes up moraines
- All moraines are basically till
- But you can find glacial- lacustrine
Deposits with the moraines
25Typical Shoreline Material in S.E. Wisconsin
gray till , red till, and sand
26EROSIONAL FEATURES OF GLACIERS
- Striations
- Rounding of bedrock
- U shaped valleys (alpine)
- Potholes
27Potholes Taylor Falls MNProduced by glacial
meltwater
28GLACIAL EROSION- ROUNDED SURFACES
29GLACIAL STRIATIONS
30DRUMLINS
- Depositional and Erosional ?
- Elongated in the direction of the ice.
- Not found everywhere ( Wisconsin and New York
state have several drumlin fields) - Can be composed of rock, till, or sorted
sediments. - Suggests they could be the result of glacier
advancing over former deposits
31Drumlin Camblesport WI
32Drumlins in Jefferson Co.
33Drumlin in Jefferson Co.
34Inside the Drumlin
35Shape of Drumlin
36GLACIAL AGES(ADVANCES AND RETREATS)
- TRADITIONAL NAMES
- Nebraskan 1,000,000 - 2,000,000 yrs ago
- Kansanan 400,000 yrs. Ago
- Illinoisan 115,000 yrs. Ago
- Wisconsinan ( 65,000 years - 10 ,000 years ago
- CURRENT NAMES
- Pre-Illinoisan
- Illinoisan
- Wisconsinan past 100,000 years. Most complete
- history starting about 26,000 years B.P.
- Â
37EXTENT OF GLACIATION
- The Wisconsin glaciation covered a great part of
the eastern u.S. It extended to the east coast
and formed such places as long island, cape cod - And block island.
- Â
- The rocky mts. Were also exposed to the
glacial ice, but in the form of alpine
glaciation. The great ski resorts are located in
the glacial valleys. (Wisconsinites on the other
hand ski mostly on glacial deposites)
38EXTENT OF LAST GLACIATION
39OTHER FACTS ABOUT CONTINENTAL GLACIERS
- A . Ice was 1 to 2 miles thick at its
central point (in Canada) - B. Sea level dropped by 200-300 ft. Because so
much - water was taken up in ice.
- C. Glaciers erode material from the middle of
its - course and deposit it at the end.
- D.Wisconsin driftless area - no glaciation
- during Wisconsinan glaciation ? cause?
- Â
40GLACIAL EROSION AND DEPOSITION
41POINTS OF GREAT INEREST IN WISCONSIN RELATING TO
GLACIERS!
1. Glacial lake Wisconsin--- Cranberry bogs
2. Driftless area 3. Wisconsin dells
42Driftless Area WI
43(No Transcript)
44MOST IMPORTANT TO US IN SE WISCONSIN
- 1. Lake Michigan lobe
- 2. Green Bay lobe
- 3. Soils / tills left by these glacial advances
- 4. The problems of lake shore erosion caused
- by the glacial - lacustrine materials--Grant
Park as an example - 5. Old beach levels or shorelines Drs Park,
Beach Dr., Audubon Center - 6. Mineral resources of sand and gravel
- Â
45(No Transcript)
46(No Transcript)
47POSSIBLE CAUSES OF GLACIATION
- Â
- A. Variation in the rotation of the earth
- B. Variation in the solar output
- C. Plate tectonics
- D. Volcanism
48(No Transcript)