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  2. Glacial stream - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glacial_stream

    Finally, the water leaves the glacier through proglacial streams or lakes. [2] Proglacial streams do not only act as the terminus point but can also receive meltwater. [2] Glacial streams can play a significant role in energy exchange and in the transport of meltwater and sediment. [3]

  3. Subglacial stream - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subglacial_stream

    Subglacial streams can transport, deposit, and remove sediment from the glacier bed; this process is influenced by water supply and the amount and characteristics of the available sediment. [12] The size of sediment particles, the slope of the subglacial stream’s channel, and the roughness of the bed all contribute to whether sediment is ...

  4. Glacial motion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glacial_motion

    In the case of basal sliding, the entire glacier slides over its bed. This type of motion is enhanced if the bed is soft sediment, if the glacier bed is thawed and if meltwater is prevalent. Bed deformation is thus usually limited to areas of sliding. Seasonal melt ponding and penetrating under glaciers shows seasonal acceleration and ...

  5. EXPLAINER: How glaciers can burst and send floods downstream

    www.aol.com/news/explainer-glaciers-burst-send...

    A large cluster of glaciers are in the Himalayas, which are part of India’s long northern border. “Ice may flow down mountain valleys, fan out across plains, or in some locations, spread out ...

  6. Abrasion (geology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abrasion_(geology)

    Abrasion is the natural scratching of bedrock by a continuous movement of snow or glacier downhill. This is caused by a force, friction, vibration, or internal deformation of the ice, and by sliding over the rocks and sediments at the base (that also causes an avalanche) that causes the glacier to move.

  7. Sediment transport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sediment_transport

    Sediment transport occurs in natural systems where the particles are clastic rocks (sand, gravel, boulders, etc.), mud, or clay; the fluid is air, water, or ice; and the force of gravity acts to move the particles along the sloping surface on which they are resting.

  8. Fluvioglacial landform - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluvioglacial_landform

    As a glacier retreats, chunks of ice may break off in a process known as ice calving or glacier calving. As sediment-heavy glacial meltwater flows past the stationary ice block, the increased friction between the ice and sediment causes sediment build-up around the block of ice. The sediment may become so extensive as to completely bury the ice ...

  9. Glacier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glacier

    The ice of a polar glacier is always below the freezing threshold from the surface to its base, although the surface snowpack may experience seasonal melting. A subpolar glacier includes both temperate and polar ice, depending on the depth beneath the surface and position along the length of the glacier. In a similar way, the thermal regime of ...