Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Table of Contents Title: 8.3 Glaciers Page: 80 Date: 3/4/2013.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Table of Contents Title: 8.3 Glaciers Page: 80 Date: 3/4/2013."— Presentation transcript:

1 Table of Contents Title: 8.3 Glaciers Page: 80 Date: 3/4/2013

2 Objective Students will be able to explain how glaciers form. Students will be able to compare and contrast the conditions that produce valley glaciers and continental glaciers.

3 Word of the Day Glacier: A large moving mass of ice.

4 8.3 Glaciers Glaciers: Form at poles and at high elevations (mountain tops) where snow falls faster than it melts: zones of accumulation. – Weight of overlying snow turns bottom snow to ice.

5 8.3 Glaciers 2 Kinds of Glaciers: 1.Valley 2.Continental

6 Valley Glacier

7 Continental Glacier

8 8.3 Glaciers Valley Glaciers: Form in mountainous areas. – When ice gets to be 20 m thick glacier will flow as a rigid solid due to its weight. – Crevasse: a deep crack in the surface of the glacier. – Speed of glacier depends on the slope of valley floor, temperature and thickness of ice and shape of valley walls – Glaciers will turn V-shaped stream valleys in to U-shaped glacial valleys.

9 Glacier Crevasse

10 8.3 Glaciers Continental Glaciers: Glaciers that cover broad contintent sized areas. – Cold Climates where snow accumulates over many years. – Thickest at the center. Weight forces rest of glacier to flatten in all directions. – Confined to Greenland and Antarctica.

11 8.3 Glaciers Glacial Movement: Valley glaciers and continental glaciers move outward when snow gathers at the zone of accumulation.

12 Glaciers Flow


Download ppt "Table of Contents Title: 8.3 Glaciers Page: 80 Date: 3/4/2013."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google