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Tearing Down Mountains II: Glaciers, Glaciation,

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Glaciers, Glaciation, & Ice Ages Presented by Dr. Sridhar Anandakrishnan The Pennsylvania State University Glaciers and Ice Ages What glaciers are Why ice ages (and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Tearing Down Mountains II: Glaciers, Glaciation,


1
Tearing Down Mountains IIGlaciers, Glaciation,
Ice Ages
  • Presented by Dr. Sridhar Anandakrishnan
  • The Pennsylvania State University

2
Glaciers and Ice Ages
  • What glaciers are
  • Why ice ages (and what evidence for them)
  • Erosion by glaciers

3
Glaciers
  • A mass of snow and ice that deforms and moves
  • Glaciers form where snowfall exceeds melting,
    known as the accumulation zone
  • Usually in high, cold mountains and cold
    North/South
  • But also possible if there is huge amount of
    snowfall, like in the Olympic Mountains
  • If it is cold, but little snowfall, the
    groundremains frozen Permafrost

4
Glacier Movement
  • Glaciers move and deform because of gravity

Greater Force
Less Force
5
Glacier Movement
  • Glaciers move from where their surface is high to
    where their surface is low
  • They can even move in an uphill direction
  • If you pour pancake batter onto a griddle, it can
    lap up onto the raised edges...

6
Glacier Cross Section
7
Glacier Cycle
  • Ice will flow from high to low spots
  • Remember, high and low refer to the glacier
    surface
  • Ice will deform most intensely at the bottom, and
    the upper ice rides on it... so the top of
    glacier is fast
  • Sometimes the bottom of the glacier is wet and/or
    soft and the glacier slides

8
Ablation Zone
  • Ice flow from accumulation zone to ablation zone
  • Ablation loss of ice by melt or by breaking off
    of big icebergs (known as calving)
  • Ice always flows down the surface slope
  • Ice flows even though solid because it is hot
  • Ice at -30C is close to its melting point (0C)
  • Ice at -30C is far from absolute zero (-273C)
  • Iron at room temp is far from its melting
    point...

9
Glacier Erosion
  • Glaciers with lots of water at the bottom are
    good at eroding
  • Plucking is when the glacier breaks loose small
    rocks and carries them
  • Abrading is when the glacier drags those small
    rocks over other rocks and acts like sandpaper
  • Any water flow under the glacier carries away the
    loose stuff

10
  • Smooth on one side (where the glacier came from).
  • Rough on the other side
  • Roche Moutonee (rock sheep)

11
  • Rocks are smoothed and scratched by the glacier...

12
Alpine Landforms
  • U-shaped valleys
  • Hanging valleys
  • Rounded bowls (cirques)
  • Sharp ridges and sharp mountains

13
Glacier Erosion
  • Glaciers really good at eroding
  • Great lakes, Finger lakes...
  • U-shaped valleys
  • Alpine terrain (cirques, arete, horns...)
  • Streams make a very different landscape
  • Sharp, V-shaped valleys
  • Usually much steeper

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Hanging Valley
  • When 2 glaciers meet, the bigger one digs a
    deeper hole
  • So the smaller one is left perched way up high on
    the valley wall left behind by the bigger glacier

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Alpine Landforms
  • U-shaped valleys
  • Hanging valleys
  • Rounded bowls (cirques)
  • Sharp ridges and sharp mountains

24
Big Ice
  • 1/10th of land is covered by ice.
  • Mainly Antarctica (South, penguins, etc.) and
    Greenland (North, polar bears, Inuit, etc..)
  • In the past, 1/3rd of land was ice covered.
  • How do we know that? And why did it happen? And
    could it happen again?

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Lots of Ice 20,000 Years Ago
  • Ice pushed down the Earth in Canada Scandinavia
  • It is slowly rising after the removal of that
    weight, 21,000 years ago
  • That much water for the ice must have come from
    the oceans...
  • ...so the oceans must have had less water, and
    been lower

31
How Much? How Long?
  • Ocean water has a lot of oxygen and hydrogen
    (which make up water - H2O)
  • Most are normal, but some have a different
    atomic weight and are called isotopes
  • Protons - number determine the element
  • Neutrons - number determine the weight
  • Isotopes have fewer (or too many) neutrons

32
Isotope Ratio
  • There is a certain ratio of number of light to
    heavy O isotopes (about 1 in 500 is heavy)
  • When water evaporates, the lighter isotopes
    evaporate more easily
  • When all that water evaporated to make the big
    ice in Canada, relatively more of the light
    isotopes evaporate and get trapped on the ice
    sheet
  • The ratio of light to heavy isotopes changes

33
The Record
  • The layers of shells alternate between
    isotopically heavy and light
  • Heavy light isotopes have evaporated light
    isotopes are frozen into ice sheets. And vice
    versa.
  • For last 800,000 years, we have had 90,000 years
    of cold, with big ice sheets followed by 10,000
    years of warm with small ice sheets

34
Why?
  • Heat of the sun!
  • The amount of sunlight varies according to
  • Shape of earths orbit (eccentricity, changes on
    a 100,000 year cycle)
  • Amount of tilt of earths axis (obliquity,
    changes on a 41,000 year cycle)
  • Sirection of tilt of earths axis (precession,
    changes on a 19,000 year cycle)

35
Ocean Critters Record Changes
  • The oxygen in shells also changes depending on
    the amount of ice in the Big Ice sheets
  • Those shells fall to the bottom of the ocean and
    stay there until we dig them up
  • We can find a shell from 100,000 years ago and
    tell how big the ice sheets were

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Milankovich
  • Predicted by Serbian mathematician, Milutin
    Milankovich in 1920s, long before these isotope
    records were available!
  • The amount of sunlight in far Northern hemisphere
    seems to control ice ages. Lots of sunlight in
    Canada means warm, no ice.
  • Changes in sunlight relatively small, but have
    big effects.
  • Still dont understand all the changes.Some very
    rapid (10s of years?!).
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