Composed of till
A drumlin is a long, narrow hill formed by glacial drift. Drumlins are typically elongated in the direction of glacier movement and have a smoothed, rounded shape.
A drumlin is a long mound of glacial till that is formed by the movement of a glacier. As the glacier flows over the landscape, it reshapes the underlying material into these elongated, teardrop-shaped landforms.
A drumlin is a depositional landform, created by the deposition of glacial sediment underneath a moving glacier. It has a characteristic elongated shape with a steeper up-ice side and a gentler down-ice side.
Yes, a drumlin is created by a combination of erosion and deposition processes. It forms when glaciers deposit sediments in an elongated mound shape due to the movement of the ice. Erosion from the glacier's movement and deposition of materials help shape drumlins into their characteristic streamlined form.
The glacier likely advanced from the southwest. Drumlins form as glaciers move over the landscape and shape the land underneath them. The steep side of a drumlin points in the direction the glacier advanced from, indicating a southwest direction in this case.
drumlin
Drumlin Heights Consolidated School was created in 2001.
egg shaped
A drumlin.
Drumlins are found on a hill
deposition
deposition
a drumlin is a long, low, tear-shaped mounds of till, often found in clusters.
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.
I assume that it is drumlin? In which case, a drumlin is a low mound, probably one of a group, of compacted boulder clay moulded by glacial action in the distant past.
It's called drumlin
drumlin