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Chapter 15 Glaciers Vocabulary 15.1: Glacier: Continental Glacier: Valley Glacier: Ice Cap: 15.1 What is a Glacier? How does snow turn into a glacier? Buried snow becomes compressed (packed down) and hardens. This process continues and solid ice results. Glaciers Type Where Exists How Formed Size 1. Valley Mountain ranges high enough to have areas where snowfall exceeds snowmelt. In other words, where more snow falls than melts. In land areas of polar regions. Snow accumulates in valleys of mountain range and gradually changes to ice. From under 2 km to 100 km long. For millions o years all precipitation has fallen as snow, built up, and changed to ice. From under 500,000 km squared to 13.7 km squared 2. Continental Valley Glaciers Moraines in steep valley glaciers Continental Glaciers 15.2 Glacial Movement and Erosion Vocabulary: Crevasse: Till: Moraine: Striations: Glacial Valley: 1. Crevasse A great fissure or crack that forms across the width of a valley glacier when it reaches a steep downward slope. 2. Till Unsorted and unstratified rock material that a glacier deposits 3. Moraine An accumulation of glacier till 4. Striations Long parallel scratches in rock that show the general direction of glacial movement. Glacier Crevasse Glacier Till GLACIER MORAINE GLACIER STRIATIONS These striations are on rocks in the Indian Peaks Wilderness, Utah. They were formed as individual particles carried at the base of a glacier moved across the bedrock and scratched the rock. The striations provide important clues to the orientation of ice flow, particularly important if we were not around to observe the glacier when it existed. In this case, the glacier flowed from the bottom right to the upper left of the