Glaciers: Systems And Landscapes Flashcards
What is a system?
A system is a set of interconnected parts that work together. They have a series of stores or components and have flows between them.
Input —> store —> process —> store —> outputs
Systems can help us understand how energy and matter is transferred and stored.
What are the 2 types of systems?
- Open system- matter and energy can be transferred from the system across a boundary into the surrounding environment, e.g. drainage basin cycle
- Closed system- transfers of energy both into and beyond the systems boundary- but not transfer matter, e.g. a planet.
What are the systems in a glacier?
Glaciers have inputs, stores, transfers and outputs. Snow and ice are the most important inputs. They come from:
• direct snowfall
• Blown snow
• Avalanches from slopes surrounding all of the glaciers.
- Together these inputs are known as accumulation. These inputs are then transferred down-valley, under the influence of gravity, by glacial movement.
- Mass is lost from the system by either melting, evaporation or calving of ice blocks or icebergs. These outputs are known as ablation.
- Dynamic equilibrium- the ‘balanced state of a system’, e.g. where the inputs equal the outputs over time.
What is a feedback loop?
The systems ‘self-regulate’ through feedback loops —> when one element of a system changes because of an outside influence. This upsets the equilibrium and changes the other components in the system. It can be both positive and negative:
- Positive feedback loops: accelerates or amplifies the effects of an action, e.g. the snowball effect
- Negative feedback loops: lessens or reverses the effects of the action, e.g. counter acts it.
What’s an example of a positive feedback loop?
Climate change:
Temp rises —> permafrost melts —> CO2 released —> greenhouse effect —> (back to temps rising)
What’s an example of a negative feedback loop?
Climate warming —> increased evaporation and cloud cover —> decreased incoming solar radiation —> cooling
What is a glacial budget?
The GB considers the balance between the inputs and outputs. The net balance between the total accumulation and ablation during one year.
The glacier is is divided into 2 zones:
1. The accumulation zone - where there is a net gain of ice over the course of a year. Here inputs exceed the outputs.
2. The ablation zone, where there is a net loss of ice during the year. The losses exceed the gains.
The boundary where gains and losses are balanced is called the equilibrium line. Over a period of several years variations in global budgets result in line moving up or down glacier.
- During summer, ablation will be at its highest due to rapid ice melt
- During winter, high amounts of snowfall and limited melting result in accumulation being greater than ablation.
What factors may cause glacial budgets to vary?
Altitude, Aspect, Short term temperature changes (e.g. seasons, heatwaves, cold snaps), long-term temperature change (e.g. glacials), precipitation.
What is the polar environment and how are glaciers distributed?
(E.g. Antartica, Artic)
—> continuous areas of sea ice
- glaciers found at the edge or large sheets of ice
- vast ice sheets
What is the glacial environment and how are glaciers distributed?
(E.g. Antartica, Greenland, etc)
- glaciers found at edge of large ice sheets
- areas of permanent ice
What is the tundra environment and its features?
(E.g. Northern Alaska, Canada)
- has permafrost
- permanently frozen ground
What is the Alpine environment and its features?
- areas of high relief
- small ice caps
- snow and ice remain throughout the year
- often in mountainous areas
What are ice sheets?
Huge areas of ice (on land)
what are ice caps?
Smaller coverings of ice
How is latitude a factor that determines the climate?
the higher the latitude, the less solar radiation (energy/heat) the earth receives from the sun.