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  2. Glacial stream - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glacial_stream

    The melting of ice forms different types of glacial streams such as supraglacial, englacial, subglacial and proglacial streams. [1] Water enters supraglacial streams that sit at the top of the glacier via filtering through snow in the accumulation zone and forming slush pools at the FIRN zone. [2]

  3. Meltwater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meltwater

    Meltwater (or melt water) is water released by the melting of snow or ice, including glacial ice, tabular icebergs and ice shelves over oceans. Meltwater is often found during early spring when snow packs and frozen rivers melt with rising temperatures, and in the ablation zone of glaciers where the rate of snow cover is reducing.

  4. Glacier ice accumulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glacier_ice_accumulation

    [1] [2] These zones include the dry snow zone, in which the ice entirely retains subfreezing temperatures and no melting occurs. Dry snow zones only occur within the interior regions of the Greenland and Antarctica ice sheets. [3] [4] Below the dry snow zone is the percolation zone, where some meltwater penetrates down into the glacier where it ...

  5. Ice dam (roof) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_dam_(roof)

    An ice dam is an ice build-up on the eaves of sloped roofs of heated buildings that results from melting snow under a snow pack reaching the eave and freezing there. Freezing at the eave impedes the drainage of meltwater, which adds to the ice dam and causes backup of the meltwater, which may cause water leakage into the roof and consequent ...

  6. Greenland ice sheet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenland_ice_sheet

    Another example occurred in 2017, when an Airbus A380 had to make an emergency landing in Canada after one of its jet engines exploded while it was above Greenland; the engine's massive air intake fan was recovered from the ice sheet two years later, when it was already buried beneath 4 ft (1 m)of ice and snow. [115] While summer surface ...

  7. Melting of Alaska's Juneau icefield accelerates, losing snow ...

    www.aol.com/news/melting-alaskas-juneau-icefield...

    The melting of Alaska's Juneau icefield, home to more than 1,000 glaciers, is accelerating. The snow covered area is now shrinking 4.6 times faster than it was in the 1980s, according to a new study.

  8. Cryosphere - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryosphere

    The mass balance of land-based glaciers and ice sheets is determined by the accumulation of snow, mostly in winter, and warm-season ablation due primarily to net radiation and turbulent heat fluxes to melting ice and snow from warm-air advection [13] [14] Where ice masses terminate in the ocean, iceberg calving is the major contributor to mass ...

  9. Glacier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glacier

    The accumulation zone can be subdivided based on its melt conditions. The dry snow zone is a region where no melt occurs, even in the summer, and the snowpack remains dry. The percolation zone is an area with some surface melt, causing meltwater to percolate into the snowpack. This zone is often marked by refrozen ice lenses, glands, and layers ...