a drumlin is a long, low, tear-shaped mounds of till, often found in clusters.
A drumlin is an elongated hill in the shape of half an egg or an inverted spoon. Typically these are formed by glacial ice affecting on the surrounding ground.
Yes. Erosion is correct!
it formed glaciers it formed glaciers
Fossils can be formed by:MummificationPetrificationDesiccationRelated question on Answers.com:How are fossils formed?
it was formed when earth had a belly acke, asces
It was formed by techtonic plates coliding together and created the volcano.
No. They will look different.
Drumlin
This type of hill formed when the glaciers melted is called a drumlin. This type of hill, which is oval and shaped like an inverted spoon, forms in lowland areas. The word drumlin is a Gaelic word.
A drumlin is a land-form from glacial deposition, which was once eroded. It is formed both by erosion and deposition. A drumlin is formed when moraine deposited by a retreating glacier is subsequently reshaped by the returning glacier the following year or after the glacial interval with caused the glacier to retreat in the first place.
drumlin
drumlin
Drumlins are formed by glacial movement; eskers from streams under the glacier.
Drumlin Heights Consolidated School was created in 2001.
Erosion
I believe it's a drumlin.
Drumlins and drumlin clusters are glacial landforms, composed primarily of glacial till, which have been extensively studied. Geologists have proposed several theories about their origin. They are formed a short distance within the receding glacier ice and record the final direction of ice movement. Sources: Wikipedia
yes
Composed of till