A glacier is a place you can visit, a thing that shapes the landscape.
No, it is a noun. Nouns refer to persons, places, or things, and a glacier is a thing.
A glacier forms in a place where snow builds up for years. The main thing is that it has to be in a place where the snow does not melt in the summer. After so long, the weight of the snow compresses and becomes as, and as long as more snow falls on top of that glacier, that is what happens..... ^.^ I hope this answer helped!
"Glacier National Park" is a place - it doesn't stand for anything.
A glacier is not a living thing; it is made of ice (H2O), an inorganic compound. Living things are plants, animals, fungi, monera, and protozoa.
Yes it is. It is the name of one specific glacier.
A glacier is something that forms when snow falls in a place where it never has the time to melt. Eventually it builds up thick enough to turn into a thick slab of ice, and that's a glacier. Cut a piece of it, and that's glacier ice.
Glacier National Park is a fun place to visit in Montana.
The Glacier Hotels are located in Northwestern Montana. They are located in the area which is known as the place where America and the Great Rockies join up.
No, Icebergs are usually in the ocean and glaciers are usually on land
The place where a glacier stops moving and deposits the rocks and dirt it was carrying is called a terminal moraine. These ridges of debris mark the furthest extent of the glacier's advance.
* Fryingpan Glacier * Nisqually Glacier * Paradise Glacier * Pyramid Glacier * Puyallup Glacier * South Tahoma Glacier * Tahoma Glacier * Success Glacier * Sarvent Glacier
It is a valley glacier