logo
title dontate
shadow

4) TYPES OF GLACIERS (AND HOW THEY BEHAVE)

Jump to: Alpine Glaciers / Greenland and Antarctica



Glacier and ice stream movement is complex. Although glaciers are solid ice, they are in constant motion.

AK-6-08-1498_.jpg

Many glaciers end at the sea, where chunks of ice break off, or calve, into the water.




Alpine Glaciers

MM7246_060921_5013_.jpg

Alpine glaciers, also called mountain glaciers, are found throughout the world’s high mountains. If a mountain glacier increases in size and begins to flow down the valley, it is then described as a valley glacier.

Some, such as Alaska’s Columbia Glacier, are literally rivers of ice, flowing down mountains and carving valleys.

MM7246_062306_509_.jpg

 


 

Greenland and Antarctica

MM7246_060715_.2441_.jpg

The largest glaciers are continental ice sheets or icecaps, enormous masses (greater than 50,000 square kilometers [12 million acres]) of ice found only in Antarctica and Greenland. These sheets contain vast quantities of fresh water. If the Greenland ice sheet melted, it would cause sea levels to rise some 20 feet (6 meters) all around the world. If the Antarctic ice sheet melted, sea levels would rise up to about 200 feet (60 meters).

This meltwater lake was created by warm summer temperatures on the surface of the Greenland Ice Sheet.

4_types_E.jpg

The water pooling on the surface of a glacier or ice sheet is heavier and denser than ice. It eventually flows into moulins, or stream channels, which drill their way down through the ice; the water then flows out the base of the glacier into the ocean. This meltwater lubricates the glacier bed and speeds up the flow of ice into the sea. Global warming has caused melting to occur dozens of miles further inland than 20 years ago.

 

The largest single mass of ice on the planet is the Antarctic ice sheet, which stretches over 14 million square kilometers (about 5½ million square miles) and contains more than 60% of all the fresh water in the world. The Antarctic ice sheet covers 98% of the Antarctic continent. Warming has been occurring on the Antarctic peninsula (where the Larsen B ice shelf was located) and increasingly in West Antarctica, where ice extends well below sea level.

4_types_F.jpg

Image: Courtesy of NASA

 

 

Next: 5) Why Do Glaciers Matter?

 
Search
 

Back to the main menu

  

EIS on Google Earth

22371237519988finalgoogleEarthlLogo.pngThe Extreme Ice Survey is honored to feature our own layer with photos and time-lapse videos on Google Earth. Click here for more information on Google Earth and how to view our layer.

>> LEARN MORE ABOUT
EIS ON GOOGLE EARTH


EIS photo of the day

You must install Adobe Flash to view this content.

>> VISIT THE GALLERY

  

73641237433484buttonnewsrss.gif

 

>> GO TO "EIS
IN THE NEWS"


73641237433484buttonnewsrss.gif

>> GO TO "EIS
IN THE FIELD"


73641237433484buttonnewsrss.gif

Please visit our major sponsors:
Powered by the Sun & Wind
© 2010 Extreme Ice Survey .  | All rights reserved.  |