Changing Distribution of Cold Environments
- Glaciers and ice sheets advance (grow) in winter and retreat (shrink) in summer
- Glaciers are systems with inputs, outputs and stores
- Output is through ablation (melting)
- Input (accumulation) of snow
- Stores of glacial ice form layer by layer each year over 20–30 years
- Equilibrium of the glacier is achieved when input and output are balanced
- There is no gain or loss of ice and the glacier remains the same size
- The regime of glaciers can be classified as follows:
- Steady: accumulation = ablation
- Retreating: ablation is greater than accumulation and occurs at lower elevations
- Advancing: accumulation is greater than ablation and occurs at higher elevations
- A glacier will advance if temperatures are 0 °C or below
Past and present cold environments
- Evidence from current landforms shows the Earth has had interglacial (warm) and glacial (cold) periods
- Glacial periods saw glacial advance and expansion and sea levels dropped
- An interglacial saw glacial retreat, contraction and sea level rise
- About 21 000 years ago, there was the last glacial maximum (the ice age), and cold environments covered more than 30% of the Earth's surface.
- At this point, the Earth's average temperature was 6 °C (average now is 14–15 °C)
- The climate was drier because most of the water on Earth's surface was ice, resulting in less precipitation
- Sea levels dropped, and shorelines extended farther out, creating more land (water was trapped in ice sheets)
- The polar ice sheets covered much of the UK and most of southern Europe was periglacial
- Currently, the Earth is in an interglacial period, with glaciers retreating
Distribution of ice in the past
The extent of global ice during the last ice age
(Pleistocene epoch)