Glaciated Upland Landscapes & Past Glacial Processes (Edexcel GCSE Geography A)

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Bridgette Barrett

Expertise

Geography Lead

Past Climate & Impact on Glacial Processes

  • The Earth's climate is continuously changing

  • There have been colder (glacial) and warmer (interglacial) periods

  • In the last one million years, there have been approximately 10 glacial cycles

  • In the UK, this led to three main glacial periods

The UK's Ice Age

  • Europe's last ice age peaked 20,000 years ago and ended about 11,500 years ago during the Pleistocene

  • At this time, 30% of the world's land was covered in ice

  • Temperatures remained below 0°C all year round in northern regions, particularly Scotland, allowing a 1 km thick ice sheet to cover most of the country

  • During the ice age, areas covered in ice were weathered and eroded to create dramatic mountain scenery

  • Today, much of upland Britain is covered in u-shaped valleys along with steep, eroded mountain peaks

  • After the ice age at the end of the Pleistocene, temperatures increased

    • Ablation was greater than accumulation so the glaciers retreated

    • Previously covered areas were exposed as deep valleys with sediment deposits

uk-glaciated-landscape

UK's glaciated landscape

What is a glacier?

  • Glaciers are large, slow-moving rivers of ice

  • Giant glaciers are called ice sheets

  • Glacial ice is formed from layer upon layer of falling snow every year

    • The weight of the snow compresses the layers of snow below

    • The air is forced out and ice forms

    • It takes 20 to 30 years for the layers to compress and form glacial ice

  • Glaciers will grow in size if the temperature stays below 0°C

Types of glaciers

  • An ice sheet is an area of glacial ice covering more than 50,000km2

  • A valley glacier is an area of glacial ice contained within a valley

Glaciers as a system

  • Glaciers have inputs (snow and avalanches) and outputs (meltwater)

  • The zone of accumulation is where the input of snow is greater than the output

  • The zone of ablation is where the output of meltwater is greater than the input of snow or where calving occurs

  • The glacial budget is the difference between accumulation and ablation

    • When accumulation is greater than ablation, the glacier advances

    • When accumulation is less than ablation, the glacier retreats

formation-of-a-glacier

Formation of a glacier

Glacial Erosion, Transport & Deposition

Glacial erosion

  • After glaciers break down the rock through freeze-thaw action, erosion continues the process through plucking and abrasion

  • Plucking:

    • As a glacier moves through a valley, pressure is exerted on the sides and bottom of the valley

    • This pressure generates friction and heat, causing the edges of the glacier to melt a bit

    • This meltwater then freezes around rocks and stones under the glacier

    • As the glacier moves forward, it 'plucks' this ice, pulling the rock away 

  • Abrasion:

    • Abrasion occurs as bits of rocks, stones and boulders stuck in the ice grind against the rock below the glacier, wearing it way

  • It is the weight of the ice in a glacier which forces it to advance downhill, eroding the landscape as moves

  • Ice advances in a circular motion called rotational slip, which hollows and deepens the landscape

glacial-erosion

Glacial erosion

Glacial movement

  • Glaciers move under gravity very slowly

    • Basal sliding occurs when friction between the glacier and the surface causes a thin layer of ice at the base to melt

      • This thin layer of meltwater acts as a lubricant to help move the glacier downhill

    • Internal flow happens when ice crystals within the glacier slide over each other, changing the shape and size of the glacier

Glacial transport

  • Glaciers transport material such as clay, rock, and sand in the body, base and surface of the glacier over long distances

  • The front of a glacier is called the 'snout' and acts as a bulldozer, pushing loose rocks and debris downhill with the sheer force of the moving ice

  • Any material carried or moved by the glacier is called glacial till

cross-section-through-a-glacier

Glacier cross-section

Glacial deposition

  • During the warmer summer months, glaciers begin to melt and deposit material (till) held in the glacier

    • Till is unsorted, irregular debris ranging from clay to boulders of any size and shape 

    • Glacial till is deposited on the valley floor or sides directly by the moving glacier

    • Fluvioglacial till is sediment deposited by streams flowing from the melting glacier

  • Deposition can also occur when the glacier passes over an obstruction and the material becomes stuck

  • Meltwater rivers carry large amounts of glacial till

    • The till will be further eroded by attrition to become outwash 

    • This finer till is sorted

    • When the energy of the river reduces, the outwash is deposited in layers further down the valley on the outwash plain

Glacial till-and-outwash

Glacial till and outwash

Worked Example

Explain one reason why a glacier may deposit some of its load

(2)

  • Deposition of material by a glacier is usually linked to the melting of the glacier

  • It can also occur due to an obstruction

Answer:

  • This is one possible answer 

    • Glaciers may melt (1) because temperatures increase in the summer (1)

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Bridgette Barrett

Author: Bridgette Barrett

After graduating with a degree in Geography, Bridgette completed a PGCE over 25 years ago. She later gained an MA Learning, Technology and Education from the University of Nottingham focussing on online learning. At a time when the study of geography has never been more important, Bridgette is passionate about creating content which supports students in achieving their potential in geography and builds their confidence.