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  2. Glaciolacustrine deposits - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glaciolacustrine_deposits

    Sediments deposited into lakes that have come from glaciers are called glaciolacustrine deposits. In some European geological traditions, the term limnoglacial is used. These lakes include ice margin lakes or other types formed from glacial erosion or deposition. Sediments in the bedload and suspended load are carried into lakes and deposited ...

  3. Fluvioglacial landform - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluvioglacial_landform

    The height and width of an esker are determined by the water and ice pressure and sediment load at the time of formation. [36] Eskers form in ice tunnels within or under a glacier, as shown in Figure 1, and are composed of the sediment deposits from the streams that occupy these tunnels. [37]

  4. Till - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Till

    The sediments carried by a glacier will eventually be deposited some distance down-ice from its source. This takes place in the ablation zone, which is the part of the glacier where the rate of ablation (removal of ice by evaporation, melting, or other processes) exceeds the rate of accumulation of new ice from snowfall. As ice is removed ...

  5. Glacial landform - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glacial_landform

    Fluvioglacial deposits differ from glacial till in that they were deposited by means of water, rather than the glacial itself, and the sediments are thus also more size sorted than glacial till is. The stone walls of New England contain many glacial erratics, rocks that were dragged by a glacier many miles from their bedrock origin.

  6. Kame delta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kame_delta

    A kame delta (or ice-contact delta, morainic delta [1]) is a glacial landform formed by a stream of melt water flowing through or around a glacier and depositing material, known as kame (stratified sequence of sediments) deposits. Upon entering a proglacial lake at the end (terminus) of a glacier, the river/stream deposit these sediments. This ...

  7. Glacial lake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glacial_lake

    Over time the glacial lake sediments are subjected to change. As seen in the English Lake District, the layers of the sediments at the bottom of the lakes contain evidence of the rate of erosion. The elemental make up of the sediments are not associated with the lakes themselves, but by the migration of the elements within the soil, such as ...

  8. Subglacial stream - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subglacial_stream

    Subglacial streams can transport, deposit, and remove sediment from the glacier bed; this process is influenced by water supply and the amount and characteristics of the available sediment. [12] The size of sediment particles, the slope of the subglacial stream’s channel, and the roughness of the bed all contribute to whether sediment is ...

  9. Till plain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Till_plain

    As the glaciers retreated and melted, much of the land was covered in till plains. These till plains were the basis from which the present day soil formed from. The parent material which these soils formed from varies greatly from one area to another, and is dependent on the path of the glacier which deposited the initial glacial till.

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