Glacial Erosion
- Glaciers create distinct landforms through weathering, erosion, transportation and deposition
- Freeze-thaw weathering happens when rocks contain cracks and temperatures regularly dip below the freezing point
- Any water in the cracks will freeze as the temperature drops, which will expand as it freezes, exerting pressure on the crack
- Repeated freezing and thawing of water will eventually break the rock apart
Examiner Tip
- Do remember to tell the examiner that the process of freeze-thaw is a cycle and happens over a long time
- Practice using a sketch to help you with the process
- After glaciers break down the rock through freeze-thaw action, erosion continues the process by plucking and abrasion
- Plucking:
- As a glacier moves through a valley, pressure is exerted on the sides and bottom of the valley
- This generates friction and heat, causing the edges of the glacier to melt a bit
- This meltwater freezes around rocks and stones under the glacier
- As the glacier moves forward, it 'plucks' this ice, pulling the rock away
- Abrasion:
- Abrasion occurs as bits of rocks, stones and boulders stuck in the ice, grind against the rock below the glacier, wearing it away and leaving scratch marks called striations across the rock
- It is the weight of the ice in a glacier which forces it to advance downhill, eroding the landscape as moves
- Ice advances in a circular motion called rotational slip, which hollows and deepens the landscape