Cryosphere Flashcards

1
Q

Cryosphere

A

part of earth’s surface that remains frozen

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2
Q

The cryosphere takes up approximately ___ of the surface of the earth

A

1/3

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3
Q

Sea ice comprises ___ of the cryosphere

A

2/3

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4
Q

Glaciers comprise ___ of the cryosphere

A

10%

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5
Q

The frozen ground comprises ___of the cryosphere

A

20%

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6
Q

How does snow reduce surface temperatures

A

Snow is a highly reflective surface (high albedo) so that sunlight bounces back into space, reducing surface temperatures.

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7
Q

When the formation of snowfall _____ seasonal melting, this contributes to the formation of glaciers and ice caps.

A

exceeds

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8
Q

Snowline

A

marks a boundary of an area that has snow year-round.

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9
Q

Snowline location is controlled by:

A

variations in the thickness of winter snowpack and local topography, which its altitude typically changing from year to year depending on winter snow accumulation and summer melting.

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10
Q

Primary ways in which snowline elevation varies

A
  1. it is at a lower elevation in polar areas where temperatures are colder
  2. it is lower in coastal areas where there is more moisture and therefore snow
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11
Q

The process to form firn

A
  1. existing snow is compacted by newer snow
  2. evaporation occurs at the points of snowflakes
  3. moisture freezes between the points
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12
Q

Firn

A

a granular snow

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13
Q

Firn gradually loses interstitial air to become ___.

A

ice

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14
Q

As depth and time increase, the grains of ice become _______.

A

larger (due to recrystallization)

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15
Q

Glaciers

A

Above a snowline, snow accumulates to form ice. Ice masses that flow under the influence of gravity are called glaciers.

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16
Q

Glacial flow is fastest at the ____ of the glacial channel.

A

center

17
Q

Glacial flow is slowest at the ____ of the glacial channel due to ____.

A

edges of the channel due to friction with the bed

18
Q

In warm glaciers, movement occurs in:

A

due to internal flow and sliding at the base

19
Q

Cold glaciers do not slide because:

A

cold glaciers are frozen into the underlying bedrock and cannot slide

20
Q

Glaciers flow as ice crystals deform under stress. The deformation of ice crystals causes the ____ of ice crystal structures.

A

alignment

21
Q

Warm (temperate) glaciers

A

Have meltwater at their base, which allows for a flow along the bedrock. This causes warm glaciers to have a rounded terminus (or toe).

22
Q

Cold glaciers

A

Do not flow at their base. This causes cold glaciers to have a cliff terminus, including a cliff shape and avalanches at the bottom as the top moves the fastest.

23
Q

Region of accumulation

A

A region in a glacier where mass is net added

24
Q

Region of ablation

A

A region in a glacier where mass is net lost.

25
Q

Ablation is caused by:

A

melting, evaporation, or calving (breaking off part of the ice from the glacier)

26
Q

Calving

A

breaking off part of the ice from the glacier

27
Q

Accumulation and ablation areas of a glacier are separated by an _____.

A

equilibrium line

28
Q

Receding glacier

A

A glacier with a negative mass balance

29
Q

Glacier mass balance

A

accumulation minus it’s ablation

30
Q

How glaciers erode bedrock at their base:

A

Freeze-thaw cycles, and physical abrasion and plucking of rock fragments from the bedrock

31
Q

Chatter marks

A

crescent-shaped gouges that can form as rock fragments are dragged across a bedrock by a glacier

32
Q

Striations

A

linear gouges or scratches left in bedrock by glaciers as they move sand and rock fragments at their base.

33
Q

U-shaped Valleys

A

Valleys with steep sides and broad, flat bottoms are a typical erosional landform left by glaciers.

34
Q

Hanging valleys

A

often present at higher elevations and feed into U-shaped valleys

35
Q

Three types of erosional features

A

Cirques, Aretes, and Horns

36
Q

Cirques

A

bowl-shaped valleys formed at a glaciers head (by one glacier)

37
Q

Aretes

A

sharp-edged ridges formed by two glaciers

38
Q

Horns

A

pointed pyramids (formed by 3 glaciers)