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Compacted, recrystallized, granular textured snow is know as [blank_start]firn[blank_end]
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Ice formed over many years with increased density is known as [blank_start]glacial[blank_end] ice.
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Zone of [blank_start]Accumulation[blank_end]: colder, input > output
Zone of [blank_start]Ablation[blank_end]: warmer, output > input, loss of snow and ice by melting and evaporation
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Accumulation
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Ablation
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Regression
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Acceleration
Pregunta 4
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In regards to glacial movement, velocity is fastest at the
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glacier margin
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glacier bed
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glacier core
Pregunta 5
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brittle or rigid zone [blank_start]top[blank_end], crevasses
plastic zone [blank_start]bottom[blank_end], like melleable plastic
Pregunta 6
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[blank_start]Basal[blank_end] [blank_start]Slip[blank_end] occurs when a high amount of water accumulates at the base of the glacier and can cause surging.
Pregunta 7
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In crevasses, ice stretches on the
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downstream
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upstream
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bedrock
Pregunta 8
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In crevasses, ice becomes compressed on the [blank_start]upstream[blank_end] side
of an underlying bedrock ridge
Pregunta 9
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[blank_start]Ice Cap[blank_end]: A dome shaped sheet of ice that covers an area less than 50,000km2 in size
[blank_start]Ice Field[blank_end]: has a topographically constrained sheet of ice in mountainous areas that frequently has glaciers streaming away from it.
[blank_start]Alpine Glacier[blank_end]: A glacier in mountainous regions that flows down preexisting valleys.
[blank_start]Cirque[blank_end]: blow shaped area, glacier is confined to the basin
[blank_start]Valley Glacier[blank_end]: cirque spill over is river of ice confined with a valley, flows slowly down hill, landscape altered by its erosive passage
[blank_start]Piedmont Glacier[blank_end]: if they flow down hill and come to the mouth of the valley and spread out over a flat land
[blank_start]Continental Glaciers[blank_end]: on a larger scale > 50,000 km2, continuous mass of unconfined ice is called a continental glacier, often as ice sheet in Greenland and Antarctica.
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Ice Cap
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Ice Field
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Alpine Glacier
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Cirque
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Valley Glacier
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Piedmont Glacier
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Continental Glaciers
Pregunta 10
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Weight of ice presses lithosphere down into aesthenosphere, called [blank_start]isostatic[blank_end] [blank_start]depression[blank_end]
Pregunta 11
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Which type of glacier sit atop the island of Greenland?
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an alpine glacier
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a continental glacier
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an ice cap
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a crevasse glacier
Pregunta 12
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[blank_start]Glacial Abrasion[blank_end] – scratch and gouge bedrock by ice and rock debris it carries
[blank_start]Glacial Striations[blank_end] – caused by glacial abrasion
[blank_start]Glacial Grooves[blank_end] – deep striations
[blank_start]Glacial Plucking[blank_end] – boulders ripped from bed rock loosened by frost action
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Glacial Abrasion
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Glacial Striations
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Glacial Grooves
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Glacial Plucking
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During the process of glacier erosion, [blank_start]plucking[blank_end] occurs on the down-ice side of bedrock obstructions, [blank_start]striations[blank_end] on the up-ice side.
Pregunta 14
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During the process of glacier erosion:
[blank_start]Cirque[blank_end] – bowl-like feature on mtn flanks
[blank_start]Tarn[blank_end] – small lake in bottom of cirque
[blank_start]Arête[blank_end] – narrow, steep ridges between cirques
[blank_start]Horn[blank_end] – mtn w/3 or more arêtes at summit
[blank_start]Glacial Trough[blank_end] – u-shape valley eroded by glacier
[blank_start]Hanging Valley[blank_end] – side trough above main trough – possible waterfall
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Cirque
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Tarn
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Arête
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Horn
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Glacial Trough
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Hanging Valley
Pregunta 15
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The image shows a [blank_start]cirque[blank_end]
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cirque
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horn
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glacial trough
Pregunta 16
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The image shows a [blank_start]horn[blank_end]
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horn
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cirque
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glacial trough
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The image shows a glacial [blank_start]trough[blank_end]
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trough
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horn
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glacial trough
Pregunta 18
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Smaller alpine glaciers form in bowl-like depressions called what?
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tarns
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a roche moutonnee
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an arete
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a cirque
Pregunta 19
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a general term for sediments deposited by glaciers: both stratified and unstratified
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glacial till
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glacial drift
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glacial sediment
Pregunta 20
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A general term for sediments directly deposited by glacier – unsorted, unstratified mixture of rock fragments of different sizes from clay to house-sized boulder
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Glacial drift
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Glacial till
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Glacial outwash
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Forms of glacial till
[blank_start]Basal[blank_end] Till: deposited at the base of the glacier.Intense pressure.Fine grained.Crushed at the bottom.
[blank_start]Ablation[blank_end] Till: sediment carried within or on top of ice.
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Basal
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Ablation
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Rudimentary
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Surface
Pregunta 22
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A winding ridge formed by till at the front or side of glacier is known as
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Drumlin
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Ridge line
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Moraine
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Arete
Pregunta 23
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Types of Moraines:
[blank_start]Lateral[blank_end] – along former edges of glacier
[blank_start]Terminal[blank_end] – along front of former glacier
[blank_start]Recessional[blank_end] – formed as glacier recedes
[blank_start]Medial[blank_end] – between 2 glaciers
[blank_start]Ground[blank_end] – irregular deposition as glacier recedes
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Lateral
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Terminal
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Recessional
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Medial
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Ground
Pregunta 24
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A previous till streamlined by glacier is known as
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Stream till
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Drumlin
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Moraine
Pregunta 25
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A - [blank_start]Terminal[blank_end] moraine
B - [blank_start]Recessional[blank_end] moraine
C - [blank_start]Terminus[blank_end] moraine
D - [blank_start]Lateral[blank_end] moraine
E - [blank_start]Medial[blank_end] moraine
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Terminal
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Recessional
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Terminus
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Lateral
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Medial
Pregunta 26
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Glacial deposional landforms (outwash):
[blank_start]Outwash plain[blank_end] - flat feature in front of former glacier (formed by glacial outwash
[blank_start]Glacial Outwash[blank_end] – sediments deposited by water out & under a glacier as it melts
[blank_start]Kame[blank_end] – large mound deposited near glacier front
[blank_start]Esker[blank_end] – winding ridge formed from stream flowing in tunnel through ice under glacier
[blank_start]Kettle Lake[blank_end] – big ice block fallen off glacier front is buried by outwash, melts later forming lake
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Outwash plain
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Glacial Outwash
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Kame
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Esker
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Kettle Lake
Pregunta 27
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Permafrost:
[blank_start]Continuous[blank_end] – poleward of -7ºC mean annual isotherm – all surfaces frozen exp under water – avg 400 m thick, up to 1000 m thick
[blank_start]Discontinuous[blank_end] – poleward of -1ºC mean annual isotherm – thinner than continuous, esp. on south facing slopes
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A body of unfrozen ground within permafrost, e.g. under a lake, important for movement of groundwater is known as [blank_start]Talik[blank_end]
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Soil that melts & refreezes daily or seasonally – as thin as 10 cm in continuous permafrost, up to 2 m thick in discontinuous is known as the [blank_start]active[blank_end] [blank_start]layer[blank_end]
Pregunta 30
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[blank_start]Ground Ice[blank_end] – distinct zones of frozen water within the ground – variable amts of water
As these areas freeze & thaw, expand & contract, they cause physical weathering
[blank_start]Ice Wedge[blank_end] – water enters crack in active layer
[blank_start]Pingo[blank_end] – surface bulges because of ice under pressure below
[blank_start]Patterned Ground[blank_end] – land broken into polygons as frost pushes coarser material to surface
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Ground Ice
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Ice Wedge
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Pingo
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Patterned Ground