Glaciers appear on almost every continent. However, they are rapidly melting due to the warming climate. Find out how glaciers form and other interesting facts about glaciers.
Transcript
Glaciers have been shaping our world for millions for years. But as climate change warms the planet, glaciers are disappearing … not only altering the landscapes they leave behind, but changing our oceans, weather, and life on earth as we know it. A glacier is a huge mass of ice that moves slowly over land. Glaciers can be classified into two general groups: alpine glaciers and ice sheets. Alpine glaciers form on mountainsides and move downward through valleys. Sometimes, they create valleys by pushing dirt, soil, and other materials out of their way. These glaciers are found on every continent except Australia. Ice sheets, unlike alpine glaciers, are not limited to mountainous areas. They form broad domes and spread out from their centers in all directions. As ice sheets spread, they cover everything around them with a thick blanket of ice, including valleys, plains, and even entire mountains. The largest ice sheets, called continental glaciers, spread over vast areas. Today, continental glaciers cover most of Antarctica and the island of Greenland. Glaciers can form over years when more snow piles up than melts. Soon after falling, the snow begins to become denser and more tightly packed. When new snow falls and buries the previous year’s snow, the bottom layer becomes even more compressed. Dense, grainy ice that has survived one year’s melt cycle is called firn. When the ice grows thick enough—the firn grains fuse into a huge mass of solid, or glacial, ice. The glacier may begin to move under its own weight, through a process called compression melting. Parts of some glaciers can move 50 meters or more (160 feet) a day. As they move, glaciers erode or wear away the land beneath and around them. When glaciers began their latest retreatless than 20,000 years ago, they left behind many landscape features, such as lakes, valleys, and mountains. Glaciers provide people with many useful resources. Glacial till provides fertile soil for growing crops ... Deposits of sand and gravel are used to make concrete and asphalt … Many rivers are fed by the melting ice of glaciers. But the most important resource provided by glaciers is freshwater. Earth’s average temperature has been increasing dramatically for more than a century. Glaciers can act as indicators of global warming and climate change in several ways. Melting ice sheets contribute to rising sea levels. As ice sheets in Antarctica and Greenland melt, they raise sea levels, adding fresh water to the ocean every day. The loss of glacial ice also reduces the amount of fresh water available for plants and animals on land. Large additions of fresh water change the ocean ecosystem, as well ocean currents. Additionally, less salt in the ocean could halt the gulf stream, drastically changing the weather on land as well. Since glaciers are so sensitive to climate change, the increased speed of glacier melt is an early warning system for the rest of the planet. And if global warming goes unchecked,many, if not all, alpine glaciers could disappear completely.RB