a valley glacier
a valley glacier
a valley glacier
Continental Glaciers
An ice cap glacier is a dome-shaped glacier that flows in all directions from a central high point. These glaciers cover large areas and can have multiple outlet glaciers flowing towards different directions.
River Severn in the UK - during the "Severn Bore" a surge wave flows upstream.....
Continental and Valley Glaciers.
A continental glacier can move in all directions and a valley glacier can move in a surge. :)
Valley glaciers form when ice and snow accumulate in a mountain valley due to the accumulation of snow exceeding the rate of melting. Over time, the ice flows downhill, shaping the valley and creating a distinct U-shaped profile.
Glaciers reshape the earth by sitting there and slowly turning to water, and as that water flows down it erodes the land that it is on therefore (reshaping) the earth.
solid (when it originates from the glaciers) and then liquid (all the way to the end)
Antarctica is a continental glacier. Alpine glaciers are a different type of glacier.
Freshwater