Ice & Glaciers By: Mario Solórzano Arnold Inga Juan Arresis Carder Brown.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Illustrated History of GLACIAL EROSION
Advertisements

Glaciers and Long Island
OUTLINE Introduction Glaciers—Part of the Hydrologic Cycle
Glaciers Chapter 15.1.
In the Beginning… Ice Age: period of time when freezing temperatures created ice sheets across continents. Glaciers covered most of.
Glaciers.
A Melting Planet.
GLACIERS AND CLIMATE Mass balance ELA Milankovic cycle Albedo feedbacks Quelcaya ice cap, Peru.
Essential Principles Challenge
Erosion and Deposition by Glaciers Created By: Belinda Schmahl.
“How Have Glaciers Behaved in Patagonia in the Past?” with Dr. Michael Kaplan Dr. Michael J Passow Originally presented 25 Oct 2014.
Glaciers.
7.1. Factors Affecting Climate Change
Formation  Snow accumulation  More winter snowfall than summer melt  Glacier formation is similar to sedimentary rock formation.
Day #2-Processes That Shape Ocean Basins and Drainage Section 2.3.
Glaciation CGC1D1 Glaciers have played an important role in the shaping of landscapes in the middle and high latitudes and in alpine environments. Their.
Weathering,Soil and Glacial Movement
The Geologic Record and the Environment. Geologic Time Evidence suggests Earth is approximately 4.6 billion years old! Earth’s history is divided into.
Proxy Records Ice Cores Dendrochronology Sediment records
Glaciation. "What causes ice sheets to expand and contract? Are the present ice sheets growing or shrinking? How will global warming impact the ice sheets?
Glaciers. A GLACIER forms when yearly snowfall in a region far exceeds the amount of snow and ice that melts during the summer months. Most of the world's.
Ice Ages Effects on Climate, Weather, & Geography.
Introduction to Climate Change Science. Weather versus Climate Weather refers to the conditions of the atmosphere over a short period of time, such as.
GLACIER natural accumulation of land ice showing movement at some time great ice sheets have waxed and waned over the surface of the Earth causes for.
Glacial Geology of Northeast Pennsylvania. How do we know they were here? Geologic forensics…look for the evidence… …and an 800 pound gorilla leaves a.
Glaciers. Essential Points Glaciers are flowing streams of ice Glaciers have a zone of accumulation where snowfall exceeds losses (ablation) Accumulation.
WHAT DO YOU ALREADY KNOW ABOUT THEM ? ANSWER TRUE OR FALSE.
GLACITATION. GLACIERS Approximately 10% of the earth’s land surface is covered by glaciers years ago 25-30% of the earth’s land surface was covered.
Ice Sheet Origins and Modern Climate By 35 mya, the continents had shifted to their present positions As the ice sheets over Antarctica began forming,
Erosion by Glaciers. Index Types of Glaciers Features Deposition Formation of Long Island.
17.3 Ice Age. What is an Ice Age? Thousands of years ago ice sheets covered much more of the Earth’s surface. Thousands of years ago ice sheets covered.
Glaciers Hydrology Daren Blanck, MS. Glacier: a Flowing Stream of Ice Mountain Continental (Ice Sheets)
Module 4 Changes in Climate. Global Warming? Climate change –The pattern(s) of variation in climate (temperature, precipitation) over various periods.
Glaciers Moving Ice Formation of Glaciers A glacier is defined as a mass of moving ice. A glacier is defined as a mass of moving ice. There are several.
Unit 7 - Ice Is Nice Glacier=pile of ice and snow that flows; Forms if snow exceeds melt enough to make a pile; Takes water (as ice) and sediment from.
Glaciers and Ice Ages By: Caitlin McNeal Pete Buscemi Pat Carriglio (Group 10)
Starter: Why is this Swiss valley floor so flat?.
GLACIERS AND CLIMATE CHANGE. Objectives Distinguish between several different kinds of glaciers and ice formations. Describe how ice in a glacier changes.
GLACIERS AND GLACIATION. GLACIER A body of ice Formed on land Recrystallization of snow=> Firn => Ice Evidence of movement Alpine (valley) glaciation.
Glaciers. Glacier: a Flowing Stream of Ice Mountain Continental (Greenland, Antarctica)
Glaciers Galore Ice Queen Period 1 Earth Science Honors November 30, 2013 The last Ice Age (Wisconsian) occurred over the last 2-3 million years (1). The.
Jeopardy Vocabulary Glaciers Arctic Antarctica Misc Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
Glacial Erosion and Deposition. Objectives Introduce glaciers as important agents of landscape formation, and discuss the different categories of glaciers.
Earth Science With Mr. Thomas. Where glaciers form: -Far North Latitudes / Far South Latitudes -Mountains (Valleys)
Glaciers and Erosion Chapter 7 Section 1.
Glacier Notes.
GLACIERS A glacier is: Any large mass of ice that moves slowly over land Any large mass of ice that moves slowly over land.
Glaciers Then and Now activity Directions: Read the enclosed (review) information about glaciers. Scroll through the 16 slides. Match each (older) lettered.
Glaciers Section 9.4. Glaciers are any large mass of ice that moves over land Continental Glaciers - cover much of a continent or large island (10% of.
Glaciers. Geologists define a glacier as any large mass of ice that moves slowly over land. There are two types of glaciers: Continental glaciers Valley.
GLACIERS AND GLACIATION. GLACIER A body of ice Formed on land Recrystallization of snow=> Firn => Ice Evidence of movement Alpine (valley) glaciation.
How The Last Ice Age Shaped Canada
Glacial Processes and Landforms
Chapter 8 Erosional Forces Section 8-2 Glaciers Note Guide.
Climate Change Indicators and Evidence. Temperature Changes Temperature records can be gathered from around the globe and have been consistently monitored.
Glaciers Chapter 3 Section 4 Standards S 6.2a Surface water flow, glaciers, wind, and ocean waves have all been and continue to be active throughout.
Chapter 7.3 Glaciers. Glacier Any large mass of ice that moves slowly over land. Two kinds: – Continental Glaciers – Valley Glaciers.
Years before present This graph shows climate change over the more recent 20,000 years. It shows temperature increase and atmospheric carbon dioxide. Is.
Glaciers. Formation of glaciers Glaciers – a large mass of moving ice. At high elevations and in polar regions, snow can remain on the ground year-round.
Climate. Weather vs. Climate Weather – the condition of Earth’s atmosphere at a particular time and place. – Short-term: Hours and days – Localized: Town,
© 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 16 The Oceans and Climate Change Changes as Result of Global Warming.
Evidence: Ocean Sediments on the Continents  There is much more sediment on the continents than there is on the ocean floor, and about half of it contains.
Glaciers once covered most of the Earth –in total there have been up to 22 times when glaciers covered large areas of the Earth… including Alberta the.
Indicators and Effects of Climate Change
GLACIERS What Are Glaciers?
Alaska from space.
Paleoclimates.
GLACIERS AND CLIMATE Mass balance ELA Pleistocene glaciation
Your names Period ____ Date________
Geography vocabulary 2 (21-40)
Presentation transcript:

Ice & Glaciers By: Mario Solórzano Arnold Inga Juan Arresis Carder Brown

Geographic Location Approximate Worldwide Area Covered by Glaciers square kilometers) Antarctica 11,965,000 (without iceshelves and ice rises) Total glacier coverage is nearly 15,000,000 square kilometers, or a little less than the total area of the South American continent. The numbers listed do not include smaller glaciated polar islands or other small glaciated areas, which is why they do not add up to 15,000,000.) Greenland1,784,000 Canada200,000 Central Asia109,000 Russia82,000 United States75,000 (including Alaska) China and Tibet33,000 South America25,000 Iceland11,260 Scandinavia2,909 Alps2,900 New Zealand1,159 Mexico11 Indonesia7.5 Africa10

Zones The accumulation zone is the area above the firm line, where snowfall accumulates and exceeds the losses from ablation, (melting, evaporation, and sublimation).

Light As well as warmer air directly melting the surface of the ice sheet, glaciers are an important part of the picture. Glaciers move ice from the ice sheet to the sea, and react quickly to changes in atmospheric conditions.

Temperatures Figure 9.40 Climatogram for McMurdo, Antarctica Latitude/Longitude = 77 o S; 166 o E Average Annual Temperature ( o C) = Annual Temperature Range ( o C) = 23 Total Annual Precipitation (mm) = 7.8 Summer Precipitation (mm) = 3.7 Winter Precipitation (mm) = 4.1

Geological Factors Geological evidence for ice ages comes in various forms, including rock scouring and scratching, glacial moraines, drumlins, valley cutting, and the deposition of till and glacial erratic. Successive glaciations tend to distort and erase the geological evidence, making it difficult to interpret. The advent of sediment and ice cores revealed the true situation: glacials are long, interglacials short. It took some time for the current theory to be worked out.

Chemical Factors Sediment yields are high from glaciers, this suggests that water flux, rather than physical erosion, exerts the primary control on chemical erosion by glaciers. Potassium and calcium concentrations are high relative to other cations in glacial water, probably due to dissolution of soluble trace phases, such as carbonates, exposed by comminution, and cation leaching from biotite.

Food Web

Species and Niche Polar bears are one of the many animals that depend on solid ice to survive. Thy need stable ice that will not break under them to live. But as global warming gets worse more and more ice melts so that means less ice for polar bears to live on.

Environmental Pressures In recent years it has been recognised that ice/sediment coupling occurred beneath the Quaternary ice sheets that advanced over the soft sediments of lowland areas. This paper looks in detail at the effects of this coupling on the sediments, which results in glaciotectonic deformation, and also discusses the interaction of deformation and deposition within the subglacial environment.

Human Impacts The effect of global warming has caused many glaciers to melt and that causes for more ocean water so ocean water level increases.

Ice & Glaciers The End