Glaciers, Climate Change, and Energy Resources Overview

0.0(0)
studied byStudied by 0 people
learnLearn
examPractice Test
spaced repetitionSpaced Repetition
heart puzzleMatch
flashcardsFlashcards
Card Sorting

1/154

encourage image

There's no tags or description

Looks like no tags are added yet.

Study Analytics
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced

No study sessions yet.

155 Terms

1
New cards

Glacier

A large mass of ice that forms on land from the compaction and recrystallization of snow and moves slowly over land.

2
New cards

Conditions for glacier formation

A cold climate, sufficient snowfall, and preservation of snow year-round so it accumulates over time.

3
New cards

Snow, firn, and ice relationship

Snow compacts into firn (a granular type of snow) as it becomes denser under pressure. Firn then compacts further and recrystallizes into glacial ice.

4
New cards

Alpine glaciers

Glaciers that occur in mountainous regions and flow down valleys.

5
New cards

Continental glaciers

Vast glaciers (ice sheets) that cover large land areas.

6
New cards

Numerosity of glaciers

Alpine glaciers are more numerous today than continental glaciers.

7
New cards

Locations of continental glaciers

Continental glaciers exist today in Antarctica and Greenland.

8
New cards

Rigid zone of a glacier

The upper part of a glacier that is brittle.

9
New cards

Plastic zone of a glacier

The lower part of a glacier that flows ductilely due to pressure.

10
New cards

Depth boundary of glacier zones

The boundary between the rigid and plastic zones is usually at a depth of ~60 m (200 ft).

11
New cards

Zone of accumulation

The area where snow accumulates and turns into ice.

12
New cards

Zone of ablation

The area where ice melts or sublimates.

13
New cards

Glacier movement

Glaciers move via plastic flow within the ice and basal sliding at the base where meltwater acts as a lubricant.

14
New cards

V-shaped valleys

Valleys formed by rivers.

15
New cards

U-shaped valleys

Valleys carved by glaciers, which widen and deepen the valley.

16
New cards

Cirque

A bowl-shaped depression at the head of a glacier.

17
New cards

Arête

A sharp ridge between cirques.

18
New cards

Horn

A sharp mountain peak formed by erosion of several cirques.

19
New cards

Glacial striations

Scratches on bedrock from glacier movement.

20
New cards

Glacial till

Unsorted sediment deposited directly by a glacier.

21
New cards

Lateral moraine

Debris along the sides of a glacier.

22
New cards

Medial moraine

Formed where two glaciers meet, combining lateral moraines.

23
New cards

Terminal moraine

Debris deposited at the glacier's furthest advance.

24
New cards

Glacial period

A cold period with expanded ice sheets.

25
New cards

Interglacial period

A warmer period when ice sheets retreat.

26
New cards

Climate change and glaciers

Climate change influences glacier size and sea levels; warming causes ice melt and sea level rise.

27
New cards

Milankovitch cycles

Cyclical variations in Earth's orbit and axial tilt that influence solar radiation distribution, helping trigger Ice Ages.

28
New cards

Dune

A mound of sand formed by wind.

29
New cards

Dune movement

Dunes move via saltation, as sand is lifted and deposited downwind.

30
New cards

Desert definition

Deserts receive less than 25 cm (10 in) of rain/year.

31
New cards

Desert formation

Natural formation occurs due to subtropical highs, rain shadows, and distance from moisture sources.

32
New cards

Desertification

Land degradation turning semi-arid areas into deserts, worsened by human activity.

33
New cards

Rain shadow

A dry region on the leeward side of a mountain range where moist air loses water on the windward side.

34
New cards

Deserts at 30° latitude

At 30° N/S, descending dry air creates arid zones.

35
New cards

Rain shadow

Dry region on the leeward side of a mountain range where moist air loses water on the windward side.

36
New cards

Weather

Short-term atmospheric conditions (hours to weeks).

37
New cards

Climate

The long-term average of weather patterns in an area.

38
New cards

Greenhouse effect

The process by which atmospheric gases trap heat. Solar radiation reaches Earth, is absorbed, and re-emitted as infrared radiation, which greenhouse gases absorb and re-radiate.

39
New cards

Major greenhouse gases

Carbon dioxide (CO₂), methane (CH₄), nitrous oxide (N₂O), water vapor (H₂O), and ozone (O₃).

40
New cards

Most abundant greenhouse gases

CO₂ and water vapor are the most abundant.

41
New cards

Greenhouse gases and global warming

These gases trap more heat as their concentrations increase, enhancing the natural greenhouse effect and raising Earth's average temperature.

42
New cards

Charles Keeling and the Keeling Curve

Keeling began measuring CO₂ at Mauna Loa Observatory in 1958, documenting rising atmospheric CO₂.

43
New cards

Annual fluctuations in CO₂

Due to seasonal changes in plant photosynthesis.

44
New cards

CO₂ levels since the Industrial Revolution

CO₂ levels have increased from ~280 ppm to over 415 ppm.

45
New cards

Global surface temperature rise

Global surface temperature has risen approximately 1.1°C.

46
New cards

Loss of Arctic sea ice

Ice reflects sunlight (high albedo). Loss of sea ice reduces albedo, increasing heat absorption and accelerating warming.

47
New cards

Permafrost

Permafrost is permanently frozen ground.

48
New cards

Thawing permafrost

Its thaw releases trapped methane, a potent greenhouse gas, further accelerating warming.

49
New cards

Oceans and climate regulation

Oceans absorb CO₂ and heat, acting as reservoirs.

50
New cards

Thermohaline circulation

Driven by temperature and salinity differences, it circulates water globally.

51
New cards

Disruption of thermohaline circulation

Can shift regional climates dramatically.

52
New cards

Coastal upwelling

Coastal winds push surface water away, allowing nutrient-rich deep water to rise.

53
New cards

El Niño

Disrupts coastal upwelling by weakening trade winds, collapsing upwelling, and altering weather patterns.

54
New cards

CO₂ and ocean acidity

More CO₂ lowers ocean pH.

55
New cards

Impact of lower ocean pH

Harms limestone-based reefs and marine organisms like plankton by dissolving calcium carbonate.

56
New cards

Oxygen isotope ratios (¹⁸O / ¹⁶O)

Ice cores contain ¹⁶O-rich water during cold periods (more ¹⁸O in oceans).

57
New cards

Ice-core record span

Some cores date back over 800,000 years, providing climate history.

58
New cards

Albedo

Albedo is reflectivity; ice has high albedo, oceans/forests low.

59
New cards

Positive feedback in climate

Warming melts ice → lower albedo → more warming.

60
New cards

Negative feedback in climate

Warming increases clouds → more reflection → cooling.

61
New cards

Regolith

Loose, unconsolidated rock and mineral fragments.

62
New cards

Soil

Regolith that has been altered by organic matter, water, and biological activity.

63
New cards

Mechanical weathering

Breaks rocks into smaller pieces without changing chemical composition (e.g., frost wedging).

64
New cards

Chemical weathering

Alters the chemical composition (e.g., oxidation, dissolution).

65
New cards

Weathering

The breakdown of rock in place; erosion involves the movement of that material by wind, water, or ice.

66
New cards

O horizon

Organic material.

67
New cards

A horizon (topsoil)

Mix of organic material and minerals, leached of some substances.

68
New cards

B horizon (subsoil)

Zone of accumulation of leached materials.

69
New cards

Leaching

The removal of dissolved materials by water percolating through the soil.

70
New cards

Loam

A soil with roughly equal parts sand, silt, and clay—ideal for agriculture because of its balance of drainage and nutrient retention.

71
New cards

Pedalfer

Forms in humid climates; rich in aluminum and iron oxides, leached of calcium.

72
New cards

Pedocal

Forms in arid regions; rich in calcium carbonate and less leached.

73
New cards

Lateritic soil

Found in tropical regions with heavy rainfall, highly leached and rich in iron and aluminum oxides.

74
New cards

Mineral resource

A concentration of naturally occurring material useful to humans.

75
New cards

Mineral reserve

The known portion of a resource that is economically recoverable with current technology.

76
New cards

Ore

A rock or sediment containing a valuable mineral that can be mined for profit.

77
New cards

Concentration factor

Ratio of the element's average crustal abundance to its concentration in the deposit.

78
New cards

U.S. predominant mineral resources

Large amounts of industrial minerals like sand, gravel, and crushed stone.

79
New cards

Iron

The most abundant ore among metals.

80
New cards

Igneous rocks

Ore deposits may form in volcanic arcs, mid-ocean ridges, or at subduction zones where magmas concentrate metals.

81
New cards

Pegmatites

Very coarse-grained igneous rocks that may contain rare minerals like beryl or tourmaline.

82
New cards

Kimberlites

Volcanic pipes that often contain diamonds.

83
New cards

Hydrothermal deposits

Formed when hot, mineral-rich fluids precipitate metals in veins or fractures.

84
New cards

Banded iron deposits

Ancient sedimentary layers of iron-rich minerals; formed when oxygen began accumulating in Earth's atmosphere.

85
New cards

Evaporite deposits

Form from evaporation of saline water in enclosed basins.

86
New cards

Placer deposits

Form when heavy minerals are concentrated by moving water (e.g., in rivers).

87
New cards

Iron and aluminum

The two most heavily consumed U.S. metals.

88
New cards

Economically significant nonmetallic minerals

Includes salt, phosphate rock, gypsum, and clay.

89
New cards

Ways to avoid resource shortages

Recycling, substitution, improved efficiency, exploration, and conservation.

90
New cards

Are minerals renewable?

No. Minerals form over geologic time scales and are thus nonrenewable.

91
New cards

Environmental/health issues of underground mining

Subsidence, toxic gas exposure, explosions, and black lung disease.

92
New cards

Two surface mining types

Open-pit mining and strip mining.

93
New cards

Hazards of surface mining

Habitat destruction, acid mine drainage, erosion.

94
New cards

Spoil banks

Piles of waste rock.

95
New cards

Tailings

Waste from ore processing.

96
New cards

Heap-leaching

Uses chemicals (often cyanide) to extract metals from ore piles.

97
New cards

Mining and pollution

Mining creates dust, acid mine drainage, and waste.

98
New cards

Smelting concerns

Smelting releases sulfur dioxide, leading to acid rain and air pollution.

99
New cards

Examples of fossil fuels

Coal, oil (petroleum), and natural gas.

100
New cards

Characteristics of fossil fuels

Called fossil fuels because they form from ancient organic matter and are composed mainly of carbon and hydrogen.