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17.9 Types of Glaciers
Glaciers may be divided into four principal types:
continental, ice caps, valley
glaciers and piedmont glaciers.
Continental glaciers. These are the largest of all glaciers. There are good
examples today in Antarctica and Greenland. Continental glaciers may form
regardless of topography, on plains, plateaus or mountains.
From the centre of
accumulation the ice moves slowly outward in all directions.
Ice caps. An ice cap is the covering of snow and ice on mountains from which
alpine glaciers spring and move in different directions.
Valley glaciers. There are glaciers which rise in ice caps or single snow fields
and occupy mountain valleys. They are sometimes called alpine because this type of
a glacier was first studied in the Alps. There is a great difference in
the size of these
glaciers. Some are many miles long and hundreds of feet thick near their heads.
Others are only a fraction of a mile in length, nearly as wide as they are long and only
a few score of feet thick. Many modern valley glaciers are but tiny remnants of their
former size.
Piedmont glaciers. Two or more valley glaciers that combine on a plain or in a
broad intermontane valley at the foot of a mountain constitute a piedmont glacier.
There were many glaciers of this type on the plains which border the Northern Rocky
Mountains
during the Pleistocene ice age, and there are fine examples in Alaska at
the present time.
The Malaspina glacier in Alaska is probably the most typical and certainly is the
most interesting piedmont glacier known. Situated immediately west of Yakutat Bay
and south-east of Mount St. Elias, it is fed by numerous alpine glaciers, some of
which are very large. The total area of this great ice sheet is about 1,500 square miles.
Its central portion is a great plateau of clear white ice
cut by thousands of shallow
crevasses. Its margins, except where the larger glaciers come in, are covered with a
thick mantle of morainal debris. Proceeding from the clear ice toward the sea, on the
outer margin of this belt of morainal material there are, first, scattered flowers then
clumps of alder and finally, thick forest of large spruces.
Yet the whole area is
underlain by glacial ice stagnant in some places, but moving in many others. The
movement is plainly shown by new crevasses and great trees that have been
overturned in the forested areas. The surface slope from the mountain front to the
outer margin is about 70 feet to the mile. The morainal belt shows characteristic
kettle and hummock topography (бугристо-котловинный рельеф).
Crevasses are numerous, as are small lakes of peculiar
hour-glass shape formed
in the underlying ice. Beneath the marginal ice are subglacial streams of large size.
Hundreds of such streams, all loaded with silt flow out from the south margin of the
glacier. One, the Yahtre, flows through a tunnel 6 to 8 miles long.
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