Periglacial Processes
- A periglacial landscape is characterised by permanently frozen ground, or permafrost and is defined as:
‘An area where soil and rock has not risen above 0°C for at least 2 consecutive years'
- The major process that contributes to the production of a periglacial landscape is:
- Freeze-thaw
- The action of freeze-thaw weathering (frost shattering) results in rough, angular, broken rocks
- At the foot of a slope, these rocks are known as scree
- Periglacial regions are also characterised by blockfields or felsenmeer, caused by the quick freeze-thaw action of temperatures ranging between -5°C to -14°C
- Freeze-thaw
- This leads to vast plains of permafrost with low-growing marsh vegetation and exposed rocks
Comparison of Glacial and Periglacial Areas
Action |
Periglacial | Glacial |
Altered by ice | Within the ground | Above ground |
Landforms created through | Freeze/thaw weathering and mass movement | Erosion and deposition |
Found | Outer margins of cold environments | High altitudes and latitudes |
Image showing main features of a typical periglacial landscape
Examiner Tip
- It is important to differentiate between glaciated and periglacial landscapes
- Remember that periglacial regions are dominated with permafrost and a seasonally changing active layer
Other periglacial processes
- Solifluction
- This is a form of mass movement
- There are two types of solifluction:
- Fast
- Slow
- Fast
- When an active layer on a slope becomes heavily waterlogged due to melting, gravity acts to pull it downhill
- This flow of material is called solifluction and produces characteristic lobes on the sides of the slopes
- The steeper the slope, the faster and further the material will travel, and the larger the lobe will be
- Movement can be up to 10 cm/yr
- Slow
- Also known as solifluction or soil/frost creep, it occurs when water in the soil expands as it freezes
- This expansion forces soil particles to rise perpendicular to the ground (frost heave)
- As the ground thaws, the particles are dropped vertically downward (due to gravity)
- With each repeated cycle, soil particles gradually 'creep' downslope at a rate of a few cm/yr
Frost action
- Frost-action periglacial processes include:
- Ground ice
- The most common form of ground ice is pore ice
- It develops in the pore spaces between soil and rock particles, where meltwater has accumulated and frozen
- Needle ice are thin slivers of ice and can be several cm long
- Found mostly in moist soil where temperatures drop below freezing at night
- Needle ice helps with loosening material for erosion and moving soil particles in soil creep
- Frost contraction and ice wedging
- As temperatures drop, the active layer freezes and contracts
- Crack begin to form in the permafrost as a result
- When the active layer thaws, meltwater will fill the cracks
- The cold of the permafrost freezes the water in the crack, forming ice-wedges
- Continued melting and thawing can enlarge the crack to sizes of 3m wide and 10m deep
- Ground ice
Ice wedge formation over time
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- Frost heave
- When ground ice forces soil or small stones to the surface, frost heave occurs
- Freezing occurs from the surface downwards, which helps ice crystals form either within the soil pores or as ice needles
- As the ground ice expands, these crystals force soil and stones to the surface
- Frost heave
Examiner Tip
Always remember that these processes are not one off occurrences. They are cyclical and take a number of years to complete the cycle.