| Prof. Stephen A. Nelson | EENS 111 |
| Tulane University | Physical Geology |
Glaciers and Glaciation |
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| Glaciers constitute much of the Earth that makes up the cryosphere, the part of the
Earth that remains below the freezing point of water. Most glacial ice today is found in
the polar regions, above the Arctic and Antarctic Circles. While glaciers are of
relatively minor importance today, evidence exists that the Earth's climate has undergone
fluctuations in the past, and that the amount of the Earth's surface covered by glaciers
has been much larger in the past than in the present. In fact, much of the topography in
the northern part of North America, as well as in the high mountain regions of the west,
owe their form to erosional and depositional processes of glaciers. The latest glaciation
ended only 10,000 years ago.
Definition of a glacier A glacier is a permanent (on a human time scale, because nothing on the Earth is really
permanent) body of ice, consisting largely of recrystallized snow, that shows evidence of
downslope or outward movement due to the pull of gravity. |
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Types of Glaciers
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Glaciers can also be classified by their internal temperature.
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The Formation of Glacial Ice Glaciers can only form at latitudes or elevations above the snowline, which is the elevation above which snow can form and remain present year round. The snowline, at present, lies at sea level in polar latitudes and rises up to 6000 m in tropical areas. Glaciers form in these areas if the snow becomes compacted, forcing out the air between the snowflakes. As compaction occurs, the weight of the overlying snow causes the snow to recrystallize and increase its grain-size, until it increases its density and becomes a solid block of ice. Changes in Glacier Size A glacier can change its size by Accumulation, which occurs by addition of snowfall, compaction and recrystallization, and Ablation, the loss of mass resulting from melting, usually at lower altitude, where temperatures may rise above freezing point in summer. Thus, depending on the balance between accumulation and ablation during a full season, the glacier can grow or shrink. |
Movement of Glaciers Glaciers move to lower elevations under the force of gravity by two different processes:
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The velocity of glacial ice changes throughout the glacier. The velocity is low next to the base of the glacier and where it is contact with valley walls. The velocity increases toward the center and upper parts of the glacier. Glaciation Glaciation: is the modification of the land surface by the action of
glaciers. Glaciations have occurred so recently in N. America and Europe, that weathering,
mass wasting, and stream erosion have not had time to alter the landscape. Thus, evidence
of glacial erosion and deposition are still present. Since glaciers move, they can pick up
and transport rocks and thus erode. Since they transport material and can melt, they can
also deposit material. Glaciated landscapes are the result of both glacial erosion and
glacial deposition. |
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Glacial Erosion (note: most of this material will be presented as slides in class)
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Glacial Deposits Since glaciers are solid they can transport all sizes of sediment, from huge house-sized boulders to fine-grained clay sized material. The glacier can carry this material on its surface or embedded within it. Thus, sediment transportation in a glacier is very much different than that in a stream. Thus, sediments deposited directly from melting of a glacial can range from very poorly sorted to better sorted, depending on how much water transport takes place after the ice melts. All sediment deposited as a result of glacial erosion is called Glacial Drift.
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Glacial Ages The last glaciation ended about 10,000 years ago. But the period between 10,000 years ago and 3 my ago (Pleistocene epoch) was a time of many glacial and interglacial ages. During this period sea level fluctuated because:
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Based on evidence from glacial deposits and glacial erosion features geologists have been able to document at least 4 glaciations during the Pleistocene. But recent studies of deep-sea sediments and dating of these deposits suggest that there were at least 30 glaciations that occurred during the Pleistocene. This evidence comes from studies of fossils found in deep-sea sediment cores, and what they tell us about ocean surface temperatures in the past. The results come from studies of the isotopes of oxygen.
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Thus, we expect that during glaciations the 18O / 16O ratio in seawater will be high, and during interglaciations the 18O / 16O ratio in seawater will be low. Since organisms that live in the oceans extract Oxygen from seawater to form their carbonate (CO3-2) shells, measuring the 18O / 16O ratio in the shells of dead organisms gives a record of past ocean temperatures. The record for the past two million years is shown here and in figure 16.30 on page 434 of your text. This suggests about 30 glaciations separated by interglaciations during the past 2 million years.
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During the last 1 million years it appears that each glacial - interglacial cycle has lasted about 100,000 years, but earlier cycles were about 40,000 years long. Other periods of glaciation are known from the geologic record, mainly from preserved glacial striations and tillites (consolidated till). The earliest recognized glaciation occurred about 2.3 billion years ago, but at least 50 other glaciations are recognized to have occurred during the Paleozoic era.
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Causes of Glacial Ages In order to understand what causes these cycles of glacial - interglacial episodes we need a much better understanding of what causes global climate changes. Because human history is so short compared to the time scales on which global climate change occurs, we do not completely understand the causes. However, we can suggest a few reasons why climates fluctuate.
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