Mysterious rock formations…….. What could have caused these formations? GLACIERS!!!!!

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Presentation transcript:

Mysterious rock formations…….

What could have caused these formations? GLACIERS!!!!!

Evidence for Glaciers  Erratics  Unsorted material  Striations  Polished Bedrock

Erratic

Erratic  Boulder-sized rock dumped by a glacier  Rock is different type than surrounding rocks

Unsorted Materials- all sizes mixed together.

Striations

Chatter marks (Maine)

Striations/ Chatter marks  Grooves carved into bedrock  Formed by abrasive action of cobbles and pebbles carried at bottom of glacier  Direction of scratches shows direction glacier moved

Glacial polish  Smooth rock surfaces  Created as glaciers flow over bedrock

Glacial Pavement….

What does a glacier look like?

What conditions are necessary for glacial formation?  Cold Summers!!  Located above the snow line, or in polar regions.  Presently occupy 10 % of world’s total land area (32% during ICE AGES)  Form on all continents BUT Australia

Process of Glacier Formation  Snow does NOT melt in summer  Recrystallization of snow to form LARGE crystals of ice (rough and granular) –called FIRN: liked packed snowballs  Lower layers turn to SOLID ICE under the weight of overlying firn and snow.

Snow becomes Firn

 Glaciers: Types  VALLEY GLACIERS:  long, slow-moving, wedge-shaped streams of ice  Bordered by mountains  Size varies*  small= 1-2 km long, 100’s m wide, 100’s m deep*  largest = Over 100km’s long X 100’s m deep

 CONTINENTAL GLACIER (ICE SHEETS):  very old (1000’s of years) and thick (1000’s of meters)  Not confined by mountains  Examples:  GREENLAND: 1.7 million square miles, 2 miles thick  ANTARCTICA: 12.5 million square miles, 3 miles thick

Features associated with valley (alpine) glaciers

Original valley (V-shaped) Glaciers come and alter landforms Glaciers retreat and new features appear

Landscape Features- Valley Glaciers  CIRQUES:  semi-circular shaped bedrock feature  created as a glacier scours back toward the mountain

 ARÊTES:  steep-sided, sharp-edged bedrock ridge  formed by two glaciers eroding away on opposite sides of a ridge

CIRQUE TARN TARNS: glacial lakes produced by glacial scouring often found in cirques

 HORNS:  3 or more cirques adjacent to one another

Hanging Valley

ARÊTE CIRQUE HANGING VALLEY U-SHAPED VALLEY

U-shaped valley

CONTINENTAL GLACIERS FEATURES

Lateral moraine

 MORAINES: material left behind when glacier recedes

 When glacier retreats (melts) rock and sediments are dropped behind  Long Island, Cape Cod and the islands are part of a terminal moraine

Kettle Lake Till Drumlins Terminal Moraine Glacial Stream Moraine-dammed lake Outwash plain Esker

Drumlin

drumlins

Kettle Lakes

River in glacier carries sediment Glacier melts Drops sediment Esker results

Eskers