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  2. Moraine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moraine

    Moraine may also form by the accumulation of sand and gravel deposits from glacial streams emanating from the ice margin. These fan deposits may coalesce to form a long moraine bank marking the ice margin. [11] Several processes may combine to form and rework a single moraine, and most moraines record a continuum of processes.

  3. Oak Ridges Moraine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oak_Ridges_Moraine

    The Oak Ridges Moraine probably formed in the Late Wisconsin glacial period. Ice melt from the Niagara Escarpment flowed into the western boundaries of the moraine, wherein conduits beneath the ice expanded to form a west-to-east passage between the main Laurentide Ice Sheet and a mass of ice in the Lake Ontario basin.

  4. Terminal moraine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terminal_moraine

    This process can make the existing terminal moraine far larger than its previous size. [2] Dump moraines occur when rock, sediment, and debris, which accumulate at the top surface of the glacier, either slide, fall, or flow off of the snout of the glacier. The accumulation of till will form a terminal moraine as the glacier retreats. [2]

  5. Kettle Moraine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kettle_Moraine

    The major part of the Kettle Moraine area is considered interlobate moraine, though other types of moraine features, and other glacial features are common. [1] The moraine is dotted with kettles caused by buried glacial ice that calved off the terminus of a receding glacier and got entirely or partly buried in glacial sediment and subsequently ...

  6. Valparaiso Moraine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valparaiso_Moraine

    PPhysiography of the Valparaiso Moraine. Valparaiso Moraine at Mink Lake, north of Valparaiso, Indiana. The Valparaiso Moraine is a recessional moraine (a landform left by receding glaciers) that forms an immense U around the southern Lake Michigan basin in North America. It is a band of hilly terrain composed of glacial till and sand.

  7. Origin of the Oak Ridges Moraine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origin_of_the_Oak_Ridges...

    The Oak Ridges Moraine is a geological landform that runs east-west across south central Ontario, Canada. It developed about 12,000 years ago, during the Wisconsin glaciation in North America . A complex ridge of sedimentary material, the moraine is known to have partially developed under water.

  8. Harbor Hill Moraine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harbor_Hill_Moraine

    East of the lake, the two moraines may be seen, but west of Lake Success the Harbor Hill moraine overrode and effaced the Ronkonkoma moraine. [4] South of the moraines is a broad outwash plain sloping towards the Atlantic Ocean , much of which has been submerged as ocean levels rose in the post-glacial period.

  9. Proglacial lake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proglacial_lake

    Tarn—a proglacial lake impounded by the terminal moraine of the retreating Schoolroom Glacier in Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming In geology, a proglacial lake is a lake formed either by the damming action of a moraine during the retreat of a melting glacier , a glacial ice dam, or by meltwater trapped against an ice sheet due to isostatic ...