Three landforms created by glaciers that have retreated or disappeared include moraines, which are accumulations of debris deposited at the edges of glaciers; drumlins, which are streamlined hills formed beneath glacial ice; and fjords, which are deep, narrow inlets created when glaciers carve out valleys and subsequently retreat, allowing seawater to fill the depressions. Each of these landforms provides insight into past glacial activity and the geological processes involved.
glaciers
alpine glaciers
The noun forms for the verb to disappear are disappearance and the gerund, disappearing.
Water in its various forms - liquid in rivers, ponds, and streams; solid in glaciers and icebergs.
The phase change occurring in glaciers is solid to solid, where water vapor or liquid water freezes into solid ice. Over time, this process of accumulation and compaction of snow forms the dense ice masses that make up glaciers.
Glaciers, mostly Glaciers Melting
glaciers
Glaciers.
Moraine is created by deposition. It forms when glaciers transport rocks and sediments as they move, then deposit these materials at the glacier's edge as it melts or retreats.
The movement of glaciers through the process of abrasion.The movement of glaciers.
Valley Glaciers
alpine glaciers
Land forms carved by glaciers in temperate areas
Glaciers, right? -^-^-
crevasses are formed by glaciers creating pressure on the land.
Ice Glaciers
A long narrow glacier that forms between mountains is called a valley glacier. These glaciers flow down valleys, eroding the surrounding landscape as they move. Valley glaciers are common in mountainous regions around the world.