Glossary of Selected Glacier Terminology (http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Glossary/Glaciers/glacier_terminology.html)
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Ablation: refers to all processes by which snow, ice, or water in
any form are lost from a glacier - the loss of snow or ice by evaporation
and melting.
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Ablation area: is the lower region of a glacier where snow ablation
exceeds snowfall.
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Accumulation area: is the upper region of a glacier where snow accumulation
exceeds melting.
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Albedo: is the percentage of the incoming radiation that is reflected
off a surface. An albedo of one indicates that 100 percent of the radiation
is reflected. Fresh snow has a high albedo (0.7 to 0.9), indicating that
70 to 90 percent of the radiation received is reflected; glacier ice has
a lower albedo of 0.2 to 0.4.
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Cirque: a glacially eroded basin shaped like half a bowl; a deep,
steep-walled recess in a mountain, caused by glacial erosion.
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Crevasses: are open fissures in glacier ice. Crevasses form where
the speed of the ice is variable, such as in icefalls and at valley bends.
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Density: is the ratio of the mass of an object to its volume. Snow
has a density averaging about 0.1, firn has a density of about 0.55, and
glacier ice has a density of about 0.89. The density of unmineralized fresh
water is 1.
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Equilibrium line: is the boundary between the accumulation area
and the ablation area.
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Firn: is old snow that has been recrystalized into a more dense
substance. Snowflakes are compressed under the weight of the overlying
snowpack. Individual crystal near the melting point have slick liquid edges
allowing them to glide along other crystal planes and to readjust the space
between them. Where the crystals touch they bond together, squeezing the
air between them to the surface or into bubbles. During summer we might
see the crystal metamorphosis occur more rapidly because of water percolation
between the crystals. By summer's end the result is firn -- a compacted
snow with the appearance of wet sugar, but with a hardness that makes it
resistant to all but the most dedicated snow shovelers! Firn has a density
greater than 0.55.
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Glacial advance: is the net movement of glacier terminus downvalley.
Advance occurs when the rate of glacier flow downvalley is greater than
its rate of ablation. Advances are characterized by a convex-shaped terminus.
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Glacial drift: is the loose and unsorted rock debris distributed
by glaciers and glacial meltwaters. Rocks may be dropped in place by the
melting ice; they may be rolled to the ice margins, or they may be deposited
by meltwater streams. Collectively, these deposits are called glacial drift.
Till refers to the debris deposited directly by the glacier. Rock debris
rolls off the glacier edges and builds piles of loose unconsolidated rocks
called glacier moraine. Lateral moraines form along the side of a glacier
and curl into a terminal moraine.
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Glacial flour: is the fine-grained sediment carried by glacial rivers
that results from the abrasion of rock at the glacier bed. Its presence
turns lake water aqua blue or brown, depending on its parent rock type.
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Glacial polish: is the leveling and smoothing of rock by fine-grained
debris at the glacier bed. Coarser rocks may gouge scratches called striations.
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Glacial retreat: is the net movement of the glacier terminus upvalley.
Retreat results when the glacier is ablating at a rate faster than its
movement downvalley. Retreating termini are usually concave in shape.
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Glacial till: An unsorted, unstratified mixture of fine and coarse
rock debris deposited by a glacier. Also called: Till.
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Glacier: is a body of ice showing evidence of movement as reported
by the presence of ice flowline, crevasses, and recent geologic evidence.
Glaciers exist where, over a period of years, snow remains after summer's
end.
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Glacier outburst flood: A sudden release of melt water from a glacier
or glacier-dammed lake sometimes resulting in a catastrophic flood, formed
by melting of a channel or by subglacial volcanic activity.
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Hydrothermal alteration: is the alteration of rocks or minerals
due to the reactions of geothermally heated water with minerals. The process
weathers and weakens the rocks such that they may become unstable.
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Icefalls: are somewhat analogous to waterfalls in rivers. The flow
of the ice down a steep gradient often results in crevasses and seracs.
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Jokulhlaup: Icelandic term for Glacial outburst floods. Jokulhlaup's
are sudden outbursts of water released by a glacier. The water may be released
from glacier cavities, sub-glacial lakes, and from glacier-dammed lakes
in side valleys.
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Kinematic waves: refer to a wave of ice moving downglacier
propagated by its increased thickness. The wave of ice may move at two
to six times the velocity of surrounding thinner ice.
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Lahar: is a mudflow or debris flow originating on a volcano. Jokulhlaups
(see above) often become lahars when they incorporate the rock debris that
lies within their path.
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Lateral moraine: A moraine formed at the side of a glacier.
Piles of loose unsorted rocks along the side margins of the glacier. The
rocks may be pushed there by the moving ice or dumped from the glacier's
rounded surface.
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Mass balance: describes the net gain or loss of snow and
ice through a given year. It is usually expressed in terms of water gain
or loss.
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Medial moraines: form where two mountain glaciers bearing
lateral moraines unite. They appear as dark streaks of rock along the glacier
centerline.
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Moraine: Rock debris deposited by a glacier.
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Neoglaciation: refers to the advances made by mountain glaciers
since the great Pleistocene ice age. In the Cascades the advances have
occurred since 6,600 years before present.
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Ogives: are arc-shaped features occasionally found across the glacier
surface below icefalls. They may be ridges and swales in the ice or bands
of darker or lighter ice. One theory of their formation suggests that the
ice is stretched and sometimes dirtied when exposed in the icefall during
the high velocities of summer; it is compressed during the winter so that
bands of different ice thickness form.
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Perfectly plastic solid: is a solid that does not
deform until it reaches a critical value of stress, after which it will
yield infinitely. Some glaciologists say that ice is a perfectly plastic
substance. (That is, brittle and capable of cracking like a solid, yet
deformable and capable of flowing at other stresses.)
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Pleistocene: is the period of earth's history, roughly two million
years ago to about ten thousand years ago, characterized by the advance
and recession of continental ice sheets.
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Roche moutonnee: is a small asymetrically-shaped hill formed
by glacial erosion. The upper sides are rounded and smoothed and the lower
sides are rough and broken due to quarrying by the glacier.
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Seracs: are the pinnacles of ice formed where the glacier surface
is torn by sets of crevasses.
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Striations: are the scratches etched into the rock at the bed of
a glacier. Their presence indicates grinding of sand and rock particles
into the bed under considerable pressure. In some places find-grained debris
polishes the bedrock to a lustrous surface finish called glacial polish.
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Suncup: is a small depression on a snow or firn surface formed by
melting and evaporation resulting from direct exposure to the sun.
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Terminal moraine: A moraine formed at the downvalley end
of a glacier. Piles of loose unconsolidated rock at the glacier's downvalley
end. The rocks may be pushed there by the forward motion of the glacier
or dumped from the glacier's rounded surface.
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Terminus: is the downvalley end of a glacier. It is sometimes referred
to as the glacier snout.
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Till: is the unsorted rock debris deposited directly by the glacier
without the extreme reworking by meltwater. Also called: Glacial till.
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Trimlines: are the sharp vegetative boundaries delimiting the upper
margin of a former glaciation. The age differences of the ground surface
are often visible because of different ages of the vegetation.
References:
Crandell, 1980,
Recent Eruptive
History of Mount Hood, Oregon, and Potential Hazards
from Future
Eruptions:
USGS Professional
Paper 1492
Driedger, 1986,
A Visitor's
Guide to Mount Rainier Glaciers:
Pacific Northwest
National Parks and Forests Association
Gardner, et.al., 1995,
Potential Volcanic
Hazards from Future Activity of Mount Baker, Washington:
USGS Open-File
Report 95-498
Walder and Driedger, 1993,
Glacier-generated
debris flows at Mount Rainier:
USGS Open-File
Report 93-124