首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Geology What point does the professor make about the snow that forms a glacier?
Geology What point does the professor make about the snow that forms a glacier?
admin
2012-01-14
20
问题
Geology
What point does the professor make about the snow that forms a glacier?
You might expect that heavy snowfall is the main requirement for the formation of a glacier. But if you stop and think about it, you’ll realize there are lots of areas of the world that receive huge amounts of snow but have no glaciers. Snowfall alone isn’t enough. For a glacier to form, the snow can’t melt. It has to be conserved. In the extremely cold Arctic and Antarctic, there are large areas that receive minimal precipitation and actually qualify as desert. Although there’s little snow, there are massive ice sheets because the snow that does fall is conserved and transformed into ice.
Of course, lots of places do get large amounts of snow, and they do have glaciers ... high mountains, for example. In high mountains where the climate is humid and cold, snowfall is frequent. Above the snowline, the annual snowfall exceeds the annual melting, so snow builds up. The accumulation is thickest in the hollows at the heads of valleys, because these locations are relatively high and cool, and are protected from sun and wind.
As snow accumulates in a hollow, it’s gradually converted to ice. First, the fragile snow crystals break as they’re compressed by the weight of more snow settling on top of them. There’s some melting and refreezing because of compaction, earth heat, and seasonal temperature fluctuations. So, the snow crystals are broken, then they’re wetted by meltwater, and refrozen, over and over again.
Gradually, over time, the snowflakes change into grains. They become rounded and granular, like the grains of coarse sugar. There are pockets of air between the grains, connecting the grains to one another. This old snow, called "firn," is generally created after one complete winter-summer cycle.
Firn is actually bits of ice. The firn begins to re-crystallize, and eventually, it combines and crystallizes into solid ice—a glacier. What happens is, the small grains coalesce to form large interlocking crystals of ice, with air trapped as bubbles inside the crystals. In the end, it’s pure ice, with all the air squeezed out. The flow of the glacier down the mountain contributes to crystal growth, as the movement helps to compress the air out.
As the hollow in the valley head fills with snow turning to ice, the hollow enlarges, and the rock walls are carved out by shifting ice. As new snow is added, the lower part of the snow-and-ice mass bulges out, kind of like a mud pie. As the mass continues to bulge, part of the ice moves over the edge of the hollow and starts moving down the valley. Large glaciers usually move faster than small ones. Also, the movement is faster in the summer, when more meltwater is present beneath and around the ice mass to lubricate it and buoy it up.
Most valley glaciers move at a rate of... oh ... between a few inches and a few feet a day. But some glaciers—called surging glaciers—can travel as much as 300 feet a day. There are at least 200 of these surging glaciers in Alaska and the Northwest Territories. The surging is caused by a number of conditions, like ... oh ... sudden adjustment to an increase in the snow load.on top, or, more likely, an increase in the production of meltwater due to a rise in temperature. Glaciers that have more meltwater are better lubricated and tend to move faster than drier ones. In very cold climates, glaciers are quite dry because of the lack of melting. The amount of water is slight, so the glacier does not slide as quickly.
In warmer climates, glaciers are better lubricated with meltwater. They also cause more erosion, more carving out of the valley floor. This is because during the melt-freeze cycle, parts of the glacier freeze to the bottom and sides of the valley, and then, as the ice moves on, large chunks of glacier pluck out rock. So you can see why glaciers in warmer climates have a greater impact on the landscape than those in very cold climates.
选项
A、It is conserved.
B、It is light and fluffy.
C、It is denser than ice.
D、It is very dirty.
答案
A
解析
The professor says Snowfall alone isn’t enough. For a glacier to form, the snow can’t melt It has to be conserved; ... there are massive ice sheets because the snow that does fail is conserved and transformed into ice. (2.2)
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/PTyO777K
0
托福(TOEFL)
相关试题推荐
Lookatthefollowingpeople(Questions24-26)andthelistofopinionsbelow.Matcheachpersonwiththecorrectopinion,A-E.Wr
ClassifythefollowingcharacteristicsasrelatingtoASocialScienceBMedicalScienceCBothSocialScienceandMedicalScien
TheHistoryoftheGuitarTheword’guitar’wasbroughtintoEnglishasanadaptationoftheSpanishword’guitarra,’whichwas,
ThePearlA.Thepearlhasalwayshadaspecialstatusintherichandpowerfulallthroughthehistory.Forinstance,women
ThePearlA.Thepearlhasalwayshadaspecialstatusintherichandpowerfulallthroughthehistory.Forinstance,women
Thestoryillustratesthatdogsare______animals.【15】
TheprofessoralreadyknowssomethingaboutClarefromher______.
Thelecturersaysthatanessayislike______toaspecificquestion.Considertheeffectsofdivorceonchildren.
Choosethecorrectletter,A,BorC.ReflectiveJournalAssignmentWhatshouldbefirstlyincludedinthereflectivejournal?
Whichattitudeisassociatedwiththefollowingpeopleduringtheconversation?ChooseSIXanswersfromtheboxandwritetheco
随机试题
关于溴隐亭的临床应用不包括:
既能清肺热、降肺气而化痰止咳,又能清胃热、降胃气而止呕止呃的药物是( )
某商业银行欲在西南三省成立一个跨省的分行,为此向律师进行咨询,作为律师对该商业银行可以提出哪些建议?
对计量违法行为的处理,部门和企事业单位或者上级主管部门可实施___________。
如下图所示,一楼房的煤气立管,分层供气量QB=QC=0.02m2/S,管径均为50mm,煤气密度ρ=0.6kg/m3,室外空气密度ρa=1.2kg/m3,AB段的压力损失为,BC段的压力损失为,要求C点的余压PC=300N/m2,那么A点应提供的压强值
选用结构钢材牌号时必须考虑的因素包括:
下列关于投标文件的补充、修改与撤回的说法,正确的有()。
以下属于改良运动的是()
下列有关数据库的描述,正确的是
A、Theletters.B、Thetypists.C、Thewoman.D、Theoffice.BM:What’sthematter,Bill?W:Theselettersarefullofmistakes!Tho
最新回复
(
0
)