By water and the sheer weight of the glacier carving mountains as it slides down.
The two processes are abrasion and plucking.What processes lead to glacial erosion? Describe them.The two main processes that lead to glacial erosion are plucking and abrasion. Plucking is the process by which a glacier picks off rocks as it blocks over the land. The rock fragments freeze to the bottom of the glacier, gouging and scratching the bedrock as the glacier advances in the process of abrasion.
Glaciers have shaped the landscape of Wisconsin in a number of ways. For example, the irregular landscape and boundaries of the state are a direct result of glacial melting.
The glaciers had created new landform such as valleys and islands
Through landslides, mudslides, running water, and glaciers.
As the glaciers receded with gravity pulling them downstream they created our valleys. Where I live in the Northeast part of the US we are in Wyoming Valley in Pennsylvania.
The glacier scrapes the surface of the earth as it advances, then deposits that till at its terminus when it melts.
abrasion and plucking
They smooth earths surface
When glaciers form they scrape earth's surface as they advance. Also when glaciers melt it deposits the sediment it eroded from the land creating various land forms.
Arêtes can form in two ways. They can form when two glaciers erode parallel U-shaped valleys, or they can form when two glacial cirques erode headwards toward one another, although frequently this results in a saddle-shaped pass, called a col.
In two ways: literally by their runoff, and also, more importantly, by their disappearance.When glaciers are growing, as in an ice age, they erode the environment by flowing across the land moving rocks in their lower regions which essentially grind down rocks and topsoil. When retreating, the rocks and topsoil contained in the glacial ice are deposited as eskers.
deflation and abrasion
Stream erode their channels by abrasion, grinding, and by dissolving soluble material.
abrasion and impact
abrasion and impact
Abrasion and hydraulic action
Abrasion and hydraulic action