Here's a hint: glacier ice comes from precipitation, aquifer water comes from a hole in the ground where minerals are. Ever hear of colligative properties? Specifically, freezing point depression?
Igneous Rock molten rock igneous rock is when it cools.
In New Zealand there are Franz Josef glacier and Fox glacier In the French Alps there is the Mer de Glace The largest glaciers in the world are the ice sheets on Greenland, the second largest glacier in the world, and the ice sheet on Antarctica is the largest in the world. glaciers are riveres of ice that moves very slowly.
Since a mineral formed through metamorphism has been crushed under high pressure and heated to a high temperature it should be much harder and more dense than a mineral formed through evaporation.
zero degrees Celsius 32 degrees Fahrenheit 273.15 Kelvins
It is a body of glaciers formed together to create a block of iceslightly better. A glacier carries moraine (rocks and rubble) on top of it, and at the terminal, much of the glacier's ice will melt away under the moraine. Occasionally, a larger block of ice, (or better insulated than the rest) will last longer, and will melt some time after the remainder of the moraine has more or less settled.This will create a depression on the surface, often filled with a lake.I believe Waldon's Pond is one such.
An underground source of water, such as an aquifer, is formed when water percolates through permeable rock or soil and is stored in underground reservoirs. Wells can access this water by drilling down to the level of the aquifer and using a pump to bring the water to the surface. This underground water source is replenished through natural processes like rainfall and snowmelt.
An aquifer is an underground layer of rock or sediment that holds water and allows it to flow, while a cave is a natural underground chamber or series of chambers formed by the dissolution of rock. Aquifers serve as reservoirs for groundwater, while caves are typically used for recreation and exploration.
An alpine glacier is a glacier that FORMED on a mountain. It doesn't have to BE on a mountain, just formed on one.
By a glacier
ice
yes from the cintinental period a glacier swept acrost and made a hole and the glacier melted and formed the salt lakes
A tarn (or corrie loch) is a mountain lake or pool, formed in a cirque excavated by a glacier.
glacier erosion
A moraine is formed by a glacier. A moraine may be terminal, medial, or lateral.
No, a glacier canyon is not a real glacier. A glacier canyon is a canyon formed by the movement of a glacier over time, carving out the landscape as it flows.
No. A glacier is a mass of moving snow and ice.
in a man's dick