enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Glacial motion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glacial_motion

    The movement of these continental glaciers created many now-familiar glacial landforms. As the glaciers were expanded, due to their accumulating weight of snow and ice, they crushed and redistributed surface rocks, creating erosional landforms such as striations , cirques , and hanging valleys .

  3. Glacial landform - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glacial_landform

    Glacial landforms are landforms created by the action of glaciers. Most of today's glacial landforms were created by the movement of large ice sheets during the Quaternary glaciations . Some areas, like Fennoscandia and the southern Andes , have extensive occurrences of glacial landforms; other areas, such as the Sahara , display rare and very ...

  4. Glossary of landforms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_landforms

    Delta, River – Silt deposition landform at the mouth of a river; Desert pavement – Type of desert earth surface; Diatreme – Volcanic pipe associated with a gaseous explosion; Dike – Sheet of rock that is formed in a fracture of a pre-existing rock body; Dirt cone – Depositional glacial feature of ice or snow with an insulating layer ...

  5. Kame - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kame

    A kame, or knob, is a glacial landform, an irregularly shaped hill or mound composed of sand, gravel and till that accumulates in a depression on a retreating glacier, and is then deposited on the land surface with further melting of the glacier.

  6. Cordilleran ice sheet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cordilleran_ice_sheet

    The southern glacial maximums extended south to Washington state near Olympia in the west and to Spokane, the Idaho Panhandle, and much of Western Montana at the eastern glacial edge. At its eastern end the Cordilleran ice sheet merged with the Laurentide Ice Sheet at the Continental Divide , forming an area of ice that contained one and a half ...

  7. Glacial striation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glacial_striation

    Glacial striations are usually multiple, straight, and parallel, representing the movement of the glacier using rock fragments and sand grains, embedded in the base of the glacier, as cutting tools. Large amounts of coarse gravel and boulders carried along underneath the glacier provide the abrasive power to cut trough-like glacial grooves.

  8. Glacial stream - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glacial_stream

    Glacial streams are also commonly referred to as "glacier stream" or/and "glacial meltwater stream". The movement of the water is influenced and directed by gravity and the melting of ice. [1] The melting of ice forms different types of glacial streams such as supraglacial, englacial, subglacial and proglacial streams. [1]

  9. Cirque - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cirque

    A cirque (French:; from the Latin word circus) is an amphitheatre-like valley formed by glacial erosion. Alternative names for this landform are corrie (from Scottish Gaelic: coire, meaning a pot or cauldron) [1] and cwm (Welsh for 'valley'; pronounced). A cirque may also be a similarly shaped landform arising from fluvial erosion.