Glaciology (from Middle French dialect
(Franco-Provençal):
glace, "ice"; or Latin:
glacies, "frost, ice"; and Greek: λόγος,
logos, "speech" lit. "to talk about ice") is the
study of
glaciers, or more generally
ice and natural phenomena that involve
ice.
Glaciology is an interdisciplinary
earth
science that integrates
geophysics,
geology,
physical geography,
geomorphology,
climatology,
meteorology,
hydrology,
biology, and
ecology.
The impact of glaciers on humans adds the fields of
human geography and
anthropology. The presence of ice on
Mars and
Europa brings in
an extraterrestrial component to the field.
Overview
Areas of study within glaciology include glacial history and the
reconstruction of past glaciation. A glaciologist is a person who
studies glaciers. Glaciology is one of the key areas of polar
research.A glacier is an extended mass of ice formed from snow
falling and accumulating over the years and moving very slowly,
either descending from high mountains, as in valley glaciers, or
moving outward from centers of accumulation, as in continental
glaciers.
Types
There are two general categories of glaciation which glaciologists
distinguish:
alpine glaciation, accumulations or "rivers
of ice" confined to valleys; and
continental glaciation,
unrestricted accumulations which once covered much of the northern
continents.
- Alpine - ice flows down the valleys of mountainous areas and
forms a tongue of ice moving towards the plains below. Alpine
glaciers tend to make the topography more
rugged, by adding and improving the scale of existing features such
as large ravines called cirques and
ridges where the rims of two cirques meet called arêtes.
- Continental - an ice sheet found today, only
in high latitudes (Greenland
/Antarctica
), thousands of square kilometers in area and
thousands of meters thick. These tend to smooth out the
landscapes.
Zones of glaciers
- Accumulation, where the formation of ice is faster than its
removal.
- Wastage or Ablation, where the sum of melting and evaporation
(sublimation) is greater than the amount of snow added each
year.
Movement
- Ablation
- wastage of the glacier through sublimation, ice melting and
iceberg calving.
- Ablation zone
- Area of a glacier in which the annual loss of ice through
ablation exceeds the annual gain from precipitation.
- Arête
- an acute ridge of rock where two cirques abut.
- Bergshrund
- crevasse formed near the head of a glacier, where the mass of
ice has rotated, sheared and torn itself apart in the manner of a
geological fault.
- Cirque, corrie or cwm
- bowl shaped depression excavated by the source of a
glacier.
- Creep
- adjustment to stress at a
molecular level.
- Flow
- movement (of ice) in a constant direction.
- Fracture
- brittle failure (breaking of ice) under the stress raised when
movement is too rapid to be accommodated by creep. It happens for
example, as the central part of a glacier movinges faster than the
edges.
- Horn
- spire of rock formed by the headward erosion of a ring of cirques
around a single mountain. It is an extreme case of an arête.
- Plucking/Quarrying
- where the adhesion of the ice to the
rock is stronger than the cohesion of the
rock, part of the rock leaves with the flowing ice.
- Tarn
- a lake formed in the bottom of a cirque when its glacier has
melted.
- Tunnel valley
- The tunnel is that formed by hydraulic erosion of ice and rock
below an ice sheet margin. The tunnel valley is what remains of it
in the underlying rock when the ice sheet has melted.
Glacial deposits
Stratified
- Outwash sand/gravel
- from front of glaciers, found on a plain
- Kettles
- block of stagnant ice leaves a depression or pit
- Eskers
- steep sided ridges of gravel/sand, possibly caused by streams
running under stagnant ice
- Kames
- stratified drift builds up low steep hills
- Varves
- alternating thin sedimentary beds (coarse and fine) of a
proglacial lake. Summer conditions
deposit more and coarser material and those of the winter, less and
finer.
Unstratified
- Till-unsorted
- (glacial flour to boulders) deposited by receding/advancing
glaciers, forming moraines, and drumlins
- Moraines
- (Terminal) material deposited at the end; (Ground) material
deposited as glacier melts; (lateral) material deposited along the
sides.
- Drumlins
- smooth elongated hills composed of till.
- Ribbed moraines
- large subglacial elongated hills transverse to former ice
flow.
See also
References
- Benn, Douglas I. and David J. A. Evans. Glaciers and
Glaciation. London
; Arnold,
1998. ISBN 0-340-58431-9
- Greve, Ralf and Heinz Blatter. Dynamics of Ice Sheets and
Glaciers. Berlin
etc.;
Springer,
2009. ISBN 978-3-642-03414-5
- Hambrey, Michael and Jürg Alean. Glaciers. 2nd ed.
Cambridge
and New
York
; Cambridge
University Press, 2004. ISBN 0-521-82808-2
- Hooke, Roger LeB. Principles of Glacier Mechanics. 2nd
ed. Cambridge and New York; Cambridge University Press, 2005. ISBN
0-521-54416-5
- Knight, Peter G. Glaciers. Cheltenham
; Nelson Thornes, 1999. ISBN
0-7487-4000-7
- Paterson, W. Stanley B. The Physics of Glaciers. 3rd
ed. Oxford
etc.;
Pergamon Press, 1994. ISBN 0-08-037944-3
- van der Veen, Cornelis J. Fundamentals of Glacier
Dynamics. Rotterdam
; A. A. Balkema, 1999. ISBN
90-5410-471-6
External links
- International
Glaciological Society (IGS)
- International Association of Cryospheric Sciences
(IACS)
- Snow, Ice, and Permafrost Group, University of Alaska
Fairbanks
- Arctic
and Alpine Research Group, University of Alberta
- Glaciers online
- World
Data Centre for Glaciology, Cambridge, UK
- National Snow
and Ice Data Center, Boulder, Colorado
- Global Land Ice
Measurements from Space, USGS
- North Cascade Glacier Climate Project
- Centre
for Glaciology, University of Wales
- Caltech
Glaciology Group
- Glaciology Group, University of Copenhagen
- Institute of Low Temperature Science, Sapporo
- National
Institute of Polar Research, Tokyo
- Glaciology Group, University of Washington
- Glaciology
Laboratory, Universidad de Chile-Centro de Estudios Científicos,
Valdivia
- Russian
Geographical Society (Moscow Centre) - Glaciology Commission
- Institute of Meteorology and Geophysics, Univ. of
Innsbruck, Austria.