GLACIERS

78
GLACIERS CHAPTER 11 GEOLOGY

description

GLACIERS. CHAPTER 11 GEOLOGY. Top 10 glacier facts. 10. Approximately 10 percent of the Earth is covered by glaciers; during the last Ice Age, they covered one-third of the Earth’s surface. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of GLACIERS

Page 1: GLACIERS

GLACIERS

CHAPTER 11

GEOLOGY

Page 2: GLACIERS

10. Approximately 10 percent of the Earth is covered by glaciers; during the last Ice Age, they covered one-third of the Earth’s surface.9. Glacier ice is the largest reservoir of fresh water on the planet, storing an estimated 75 percent of the world’s supply.8. Glaciers are found in 47 countries.7. A glacier can range in length from the equivalent of a football field to more than 100 miles.6. The Antarctic ice sheet is actually a glacier and has existed for at least 40 million years. If it were to melt in its entirety, sea levels would rise 210 feet worldwide, according to the U.S. Geological Service.

Top 10 glacier facts

Page 3: GLACIERS

5. Though it sits on the equator, Mount Kilimanjaro is glaciated.4. On steep slopes, a glacier can be as thin as 50 feet.3. Mountain valleys are typically “V” shaped before being taken oven by a glacier; during glaciation, the valley widens and deepens and thus becomes “U” shaped.2. A single glacier ice crystal can grow to be as large as a baseball.1. Alaska is estimated to have more than 100,000 glaciers. Most remain unnamed

Page 4: GLACIERS

World glaciers

Page 5: GLACIERS
Page 6: GLACIERS

What is a glacier?

a thick mass of moving ice

http://www.jadecoast.ca/Sawyer%20glacier.JPG

Page 7: GLACIERS

Glaciar Perito Moreno, in Santa Cruz province, Argentina. It hasn’t happened since 1988 and it is said to be one of the most extraordinary natural events in the world.

- Roberto Cerrudo

Page 8: GLACIERS

Trans Labrador Highway

Page 9: GLACIERS

Snow to firn to glacial ice

Page 10: GLACIERS
Page 11: GLACIERS
Page 12: GLACIERS

How do glaciers erode the surface?

• Plucking –freeze/thaw process lifts particles into ice

Striations- parallel scratches made from rocks in ice scraping against bedrock

Page 13: GLACIERS

Kelly’s IslandGlacial grooves

Page 14: GLACIERS
Page 15: GLACIERS
Page 16: GLACIERS

Glacial polish

Page 17: GLACIERS

TYPES OF GLACIERS

• Alpine (Valley)Glaciers – glaciers that form at high elevation in mountain valleys

• Ice sheets or Continental Glaciers form in polar regions such as Greenland and Antarctica.

Page 18: GLACIERS

http://daac.gsfc.nasa.gov/DAAC_DOCS/geomorphology/GEO_9/geo_images_9/Fig9.20.gif

Page 19: GLACIERS

Cirque

• A bowl-shaped depression located where a glacier begins to form

Page 20: GLACIERS
Page 21: GLACIERS

http://crevassezone.org/Photos/Graphics/4163L-(Cirque).jpg

Page 22: GLACIERS

Horn

• A tall, pointed rock peak left at the top of a mountain

http://www2.nature.nps.gov/geology//parks/glac/car0348.jpg

Kinnerly Peak - Glacier National Park

Page 23: GLACIERS

The most famous horn in the Alps… The Matterhorn

• Located on the boundary between Switzerland and Italy, the Matterhorn’s summit is 1500 feet above sea level.

Page 24: GLACIERS

Arete – spines or ridges of rock that separate glacial valleys

Page 25: GLACIERS

U-shaped Valley - Yosemite National Park

Page 26: GLACIERS

V-shaped valleys become U-shaped valleys as glaciers move through them…

A typical river valley

Over time, running water cuts a deeper V-shape.

Step 1 Step 2

Step 3 Step 4Glacier fills valley, widening and straightening the channel

Glaciers melt leaving a U-shaped valley

Page 27: GLACIERS

VALLEY GLACIER

Page 28: GLACIERS

Glaciers pick up lots of sediment as they advance over the land.

http://www.geographyjim.org/Newzealandglacier.jpg

Page 29: GLACIERS

TYPES OF GLACIAL DRIFT(Sediments)

• TILL- unsorted; deposited by ice

• STRATIFIED DRIFT- layered; deposited by meltwater streams

• OUTWASH- sorted sand; deposited by meltwater

Page 30: GLACIERS

till

outwash

Page 31: GLACIERS

Erratics

•Boulders carried great distance by the glacier

•Don’t match surrounding rock

•“strange rock”

Page 32: GLACIERS
Page 33: GLACIERS

Erratics along Lake Michigan Shoreline

Page 34: GLACIERS
Page 35: GLACIERS

TYPES OF GLACIERS

• Alpine (Valley)Glaciers – glaciers that form at high elevation in mountain valleys

• Ice sheets or Continental Glaciers form in polar regions such as Greenland and Antarctica.

Page 36: GLACIERS

MORAINES

• Deposited along edge of glacier during melting

• Ridges of till• Terminal- very end of

glacier• Lateral- side of glacier• Recessional-

progresses behind terminal

Page 37: GLACIERS

MORAINES

• MADE OF TILL

http://www.helsinki.fi/~jhyvonen/PB/M/Cerro%20Tronador%20moraine-pp.JPG

Page 38: GLACIERS

terminal moraine – unsorted sediments deposited at the edge of the melting glacier

Page 39: GLACIERS
Page 40: GLACIERS

Ground Moraine- flat till deposits between recessional moraines

Page 41: GLACIERS

Moraine Deposits = unsorted sedimentsMoraines are made of unsorted sediments.

Only mass movements and glaciers deposit

unsorted sediments.

Since there are no large hills or

mountains in Michigan for this sediment to fall

down, it must have been deposited by the

glaciers.

Page 42: GLACIERS
Page 43: GLACIERS

Drumlins

• Hills of sediment deposited by the glacier- till

Page 44: GLACIERS

Boyne, Nubs Nob, Irish Hills are drumlins in MI

Page 45: GLACIERS

MI Drumlins

Page 46: GLACIERS

KAMES

Cone shaped deposits

Deposited at end of meltwater streams

Stratified drift

Page 47: GLACIERS

Mt. Holly is a kame

Page 48: GLACIERS

ESKERS

• Meandering ridges of stratified drift

• Deposited by meltwater streams

• Mined for gravel

Page 49: GLACIERS

Mason esker

Mt. Brighton

Page 50: GLACIERS

Kettle Lakes

• Made from ice blocks

• Deep inland lakes• rocky

Page 51: GLACIERS

Kettle Lakes

• Kettle lakes form when blocks of ice break off the front edge of a glacier, become buried by sediment. The ice melts leaving a hole which fills with water creating a lake.

Page 52: GLACIERS

Outwash plain

• From melt water (lake) in front of ice

• Flat; sandy

• Contains outwash and often kettle lakes

Page 53: GLACIERS

Pleistocene Epoch“Ice Age”

2my- present

Page 54: GLACIERS

1.5 mya

Page 55: GLACIERS
Page 56: GLACIERS

mastodon

Page 57: GLACIERS

Mammoth

• Bigger than mastodon

• Curvy tusk

Page 58: GLACIERS

When the climate cooled…

Ice advanced over the land, moving southward from Canada over the Great Lakes Region.

Page 59: GLACIERS
Page 60: GLACIERS

Each of the Great Lakes began as a river.

Image from Earth Science, Tarbuck and Lutgens, 2003

Page 61: GLACIERS

As the climate cooled…

• The rivers froze.

• Glaciers moved through the river valley – widening and deepening them to form today’s lake bottoms.

Page 62: GLACIERS

Why do scientists believe that glaciers once covered Michigan?

Page 63: GLACIERS

Moraine Deposits =unsorted sediments

• What can deposit unsorted sediment?

Mass movement?

ice

Page 64: GLACIERS

Moraine Deposits have the same shape as the Great Lakes.

• Michigan moraines run parallel to the shoreline.

• The same process that formed the moraines formed the Great Lakes.

Page 65: GLACIERS

3 ice lobes

Page 66: GLACIERS

When the climate began to warm, the glaciers began to melt and retreat.

http://www.msstate.edu/dept/geosciences/CT/TIG/WEBSITES/LOCAL/Spring2002/Michael_Marsicek/images/Great_Lakes_Formation.gif

Page 67: GLACIERS

The Glacial History of Michigan

• The depth of the lake is determined by the thickness of the ice at the time of glaciation. The farther north the lobe of ice, the thicker it was.

• Consequently, the lakes get more shallow in the southern Great Lakes region.

LAKE: GREATEST DEPTH:

• Superior = 1,333 ft.• Michigan = 925 ft.• Huron = 725 ft.• Ontario = 283 ft.• Erie = 212

ft.

Page 68: GLACIERS

The fresh water from the melting glaciers filled in the deep U-shaped valleys that they had carved and

turned them into the lakes we have today.

http://www.ofps.ucar.edu/gapp/networks/images/greatlakes_map.jpg

Page 69: GLACIERS

What other evidence do we have that glaciers once covered our state?

• Depositional features such as drumlins and kettle lakes.

Kalkaska, Michigan

Page 70: GLACIERS

Isostatic (crustal) reboundland is rebounding up from weight

of glacierabout 53 cm/ century

Page 71: GLACIERS

Pictured Rocks

Page 72: GLACIERS

Kettle Lakes

Page 73: GLACIERS

Why do scientists believe that glaciers once covered Michigan?

• Michigan is covered with till

• The moraine deposits follow the outline of Great Lakes

• Erratics

• Striations

• Isostatic rebound

Page 74: GLACIERS

What glacier evidence do we see in Grosse Pointe?

• Erratics• Old beach ridges

– Ridge road– Mack avenue

• Till

Page 75: GLACIERS
Page 76: GLACIERS

Resources• http://cse.cosm.sc.edu/erth_sci/Erosion/plucking.jpg

• http://www.skidmore.edu/academics/geo/courses/ge101/Pictures/Glaciers/GlacialStriations.jpg

• http://www.go2moon.com/image/Valdez-Glacier.jpg

• http://www.glaciers.pdx.edu/kennicott/photos99/glacier.jpg

• http://www.brownbearsw.com/photos/pws/moraine.jpg

• http://www.homepage.montana.edu/~geol445/hyperglac/depproc1/moraine.JPG

• http://www.ucalgary.ca/~dgsmit/MORAINE.jpg

• http://mac01.eps.pitt.edu/harbbook/c_viii/images/icefields/Hwb0530.GIF

• http://www.geographyhigh.connectfree.co.uk/s3glacgeoghigh34b.gif

• http://www.uwsp.edu/geo/faculty/lemke/images/lithosphere/drumlin_diagram_small.gif

• http://online.sd43.bc.ca/della/images/drumlin.jpg

• http://www.geology.wisc.edu/~qlab/g420/drumlin.jpg

• http://www.bbc.co.uk/scotland/education/bitesize/standard/img/geography/glaciation/g98.gif

• http://pbisotopes.ess.sunysb.edu/esp/Science_Walks/carmans/kettle-hole.gif

Page 77: GLACIERS

• http://perth.uwlax.edu/faculty/stoelting/Intro/Guides/Images3/southern_Kettle_Moraine_lakes_WI_800.jpg

• http://images3.vrbo.com/vrbo/images/18982c.jpg• http://www.on.ec.gc.ca/greatlakeskids/images/g_lakes_form.gif• http://wrgis.wr.usgs.gov/docs/parks/glacier/UvalleyB.gif• http://wrgis.wr.usgs.gov/docs/parks/glacier/UvalleyC.gif• http://www.jchl.co.uk/photos/greenland/Valley.jpg• http://www.emporia.edu/earthsci/student/martel1/ice.jpg• http://wrgis.wr.usgs.gov/docs/parks/glacier/gifJPGdisplay.html• http://www.uwsp.edu/geo/faculty/lemke/alpine_glacial_glossary/images/

more_examples/canada_cirque01_dh.jpg• http://www.uoregon.edu/~millerm/Kluane1.jpeg• http://people.surfaceeffect.com/pete/photos/folksholiday/yosemitevalley/

valley2.jpg• http://www.theotherpages.org/images/image200.jpg• http://www.northforkmedia.com/spiveyscience/images/glacialerosion/

pages/grinnellcirqueareteetc_jpg.htm• http://www3.uakron.edu/modlang/97trip/d16f.jpg• http://tvl1.geo.uc.edu/ice/Image/icland/Greenland.html• http://www.bougerolle.net/photos/matterhorn.jpg

Page 78: GLACIERS

• http://perth.uwlax.edu/faculty/stoelting/Intro/Guides/Images3/glacial_erratics_Lake_Michigan_WI_800.jpg

• http://www.fettes.com/Cairngorms/images/Easter_Island.jpg

• http://rt23.com/Scenery/spring/images/tripod_rock.jpg

• http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rocks/eart109/Photo_Composition/Top_Pothole.jpg

• http://perth.uwlax.edu/faculty/stoelting/Intro/Guides/Images3/southern_Kettle_Moraine_lakes_WI_800.jpg