OCR A Level GL - 7. OCR A Level GL 2.2b DEPOSITIONAL LANDFORMS Flashcards
What is a moraine?
distinct ridges or mounds of debris that are laid down directly by a glacier or pushed up by it.
How big are moraines?
They range from low-relief ridges of ~1 m high and ~1 m wide formed at the snout of actively retreating valley glaciers, to vast ‘till plains’ left behind by former continental ice sheets.
What are moraines made of?
they consist of loose sediment and rock debris deposited by glacier ice, known as till. All of this material has come from rock material that has fallen onto or been eroded by the glacier
Why are moraines important?
they help to understand past environments. Terminal moraines, for example, mark the maximum extent of a glacier advance and are used by glaciologists to reconstruct the former size of glaciers and ice sheets that have now shrunk or disappeared entirely.
What is a terminal moraine?
A ridge that marks the maximum limit of a glacier advance.
What sizes can terminal moraines be?
The largest terminal moraines are formed by major continental ice sheets and can be over 100 m in height and 10s of kilometres long.
What is a lateral moraine?
A long mound of material deposited along the sides of a glacier
What size can lateral moraines be?
they can reach heights of more than 100 metres.
What is a recessional moraine?
moraines that are found behind a terminal moraine. They form during short-lived phases of glacier advance
What are medial moraines?
these form where lateral moraines meet at the confluence of two valley glaciers.
What is an erratic?
rocks that have been transported by ice and deposited elsewhere. The type of rock (lithology) that the glacial erratic is made from is different to the lithology of the bedrock where the erratic is deposited.
Why are erratics useful?
because erratics have a distinctive rock type, their source outcrop can be identified and located. They are therefore useful in:
1. reconstructing past glacier flow directions,
2. identifying the timing of glacier retreat, and
3. identifying the type of glacier flow.
What is a drumlin?
Smooth, elongated mounds of till that are smoothed in the direction of the glacier’s flow
What are the general sizes of drumlins?
can be 50 meters high and over one kilometre in length
What are groups of drumlins known as?
a swarm