ablation | The loss of the glacial ice or snow by melting, evaporation, or breaking off into icebergs. (Also called wastage).
(See page(s) 287)
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advancing glacier | Glacier with a positive budget, so that accumulation results in the lower edges being pushed outward and downward.
(See page(s) 287)
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alpine glaciation | Glaciation of a mountainous area.
(See page(s) 284)
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arête | A sharp ridge that separates adjacent glacially carved valleys.
(See page(s) 294)
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basal sliding | Movement in which the entire glacier slides along as a single body on its base over the underlying rock.
(See page(s) 290)
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cirque | A steep-sided, amphitheater-like hollow carved into a mountain at the head of a glacial valley.
(See page(s) 296)
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continental glaciation | The covering of a large region of a continent by a sheet of glacial ice.
(See page(s) 284)
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crevasse | Open fissure in a glacier.
(See page(s) 292)
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drumlin | A long, streamlined hill made of till.
(See page(s) 301)
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end moraine | A ridge of till piled up along the front edge of a glacier.
(See page(s) 300)
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equilibrium line | An irregular line marking the highest level to which the winter snow cover on a glacier is lost during a melt season. (Also called snow line.)
(See page(s) 288)
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erratic | An ice-transported boulder that does not derive from bedrock near its present site.
(See page(s) 299)
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esker | A long, sinuous ridge of sediment deposited by glacial meltwater.
(See page(s) 301)
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fjord | A coastal inlet that is a glacially carved valley, the base of which is submerged.
(See page(s) 308)
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glacier | A large, long-lasting mass of ice, formed on land by the compaction and recrystallization of snow, which moves because of its own weight.
(See page(s) 284)
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ground moraine | A blanket of till deposited by a glacier or released as glacier ice melted.
(See page(s) 301)
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hanging valley | A smaller valley that terminates abruptly high above a main valley.
(See page(s) 296)
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horn | A sharp peak formed where cirques cut back into a mountain on several sides.
(See page(s) 297)
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iceberg | Block of glacier-derived ice floating in water.
(See page(s) 287)
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ice cap | A glacier covering a relatively small area of land but not restricted to a valley.
(See page(s) 286)
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ice sheet | A glacier covering a large area (more than 50,000 square kilometers) of land.
(See page(s) 286)
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kettle | A depression caused by the melting of a stagnant block of ice that was surrounded by sediment.
(See page(s) 303)
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lateral moraine | A low ridgelike pile of till along the side of a glacier.
(See page(s) 299)
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medial moraine | A single long ridge of till on a glacier, formed by adjacent lateral moraines joining and being carried downglacier.
(See page(s) 300)
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moraine | A body of till either being carried on a glacier or left behind after a glacier has receded.
(See page(s) 299)
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outwash | Material deposited by debris-laden meltwater from a glacier.
(See page(s) 301)
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plastic flow | Movement within a glacier in which the ice is not fractured.
(See page(s) 290)
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pluvial lake | A lake formed during an earlier time of abundant rainfall.
(See page(s) 307)
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receding glacier | A glacier with a negative budget, which causes the glacier to grow smaller as its edges melt back.
(See page(s) 287)
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rigid zone | Upper part of a glacier in which there is no plastic flow.
(See page(s) 290)
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rock-basin lake (tarn) | A lake occupying a depression caused by glacial erosion of bedrock.
(See page(s) 296)
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rock flour | A powder of fine fragments of rock produced by glacial abrasion.
(See page(s) 294)
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tarns | See rock-basin lake.
(See page(s) 296)
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terminus | The lower edge of a glacier.
(See page(s) 288)
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theory of glacial ages | At times in the past, colder climates prevailed during which significantly more of the land surface of Earth was glaciated than at present.
(See page(s) 284)
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till | Unsorted and unlayered rock debris carried by a glacier.
(See page(s) 299)
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tillite | Lithified till.
(See page(s) 309)
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truncated spur | Triangular facet where the lower end of a ridge has been eroded by glacial ice.
(See page(s) 296)
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U-shaped valley | Characteristic cross-profile of a valley carved by glacial erosion.
(See page(s) 296)
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valley glacier | A glacier confined to a valley. The ice flows from a higher to a lower elevation.
(See page(s) 285)
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varve | Two thin layers of sediment, one dark and the other light in color, representing one year’s deposition in a lake.
(See page(s) 303)
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zone of ablation | That portion of a glacier in which ice is lost.
(See page(s) 288)
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zone of accumulation | That portion of a glacier with a perennial snow cover.
(See page(s) 288)
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