Chapter 6 G.C. Leong’s  Certificate Physical and Human Geography

Chapter 6: Landforms of Glaciation

This chapter details how glaciers (moving masses of ice) shape the landscape in high latitudes and high altitudes. Glaciation is a powerful agent of erosion, transportation, and deposition.


1. The Nature of Glaciers

  • Snowline: The height above which snow remains on the ground all year.
  • Glacier Movement: Glaciers move under the force of gravity. Movement is faster in the center and top, and slower at the sides and bottom due to friction.
  • Processes of Glacial Erosion:
    • Plucking: The glacier freezes onto rocks and “plucks” them away as it moves.
    • Abrasion: The ice uses embedded rocks like sandpaper to grind and polish the valley floor.

2. Glacial Erosional Landforms (Highlands)

  • Corrie (Cirque/Cwm): A horseshoe-shaped depression carved into a mountain. When the ice melts, the circular lake left behind is called a Tarn.
  • Arête: A sharp, knife-like ridge formed between two adjacent corries.
  • Pyramidal Peak (Horn): A pointed mountain peak formed when several corries cut back into the same mountain (e.g., Matterhorn in the Alps).
  • U-Shaped Valley (Glacial Trough): Glaciers widen and deepen V-shaped river valleys into broad, flat-bottomed U-shapes.
  • Hanging Valley: A tributary valley that “hangs” above the main U-shaped valley, often resulting in waterfalls.
  • Fjord: A deep, water-filled glacial valley that has been submerged by the sea.

3. Glacial Depositional Landforms (Lowlands)

Material transported by a glacier is called Moraine or Glacial Drift.

  • Terminal Moraine: A ridge of debris deposited at the furthest point reached by the glacier.
  • Lateral Moraine: Debris deposited along the sides of the glacier.
  • Drumlins: Smooth, oval-shaped hills of glacial till that look like “half-buried eggs.”
  • Eskers: Long, winding ridges of sand and gravel deposited by meltwater streams running under the ice.
  • Erratic: Large boulders stranded far from their original location after the ice melts.

4. Quick Revision: Key Terms

  • Roche Moutonnée: A rock hill smoothed on the “up-ice” side and jagged on the “down-ice” side.
  • Crag and Tail: A mass of hard rock (crag) protecting a slope of softer rock (tail) behind it.
  • Outwash Plain: A flat area of gravel and sand deposited by meltwater beyond the terminal moraine.

FeatureTypeDistinctive Character
CorrieErosionArmchair-shaped hollow
ArêteErosionSharp ridge
DrumlinDeposition“Basket of eggs” topography
MoraineDepositionUnsorted glacial debris

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