Glaciology and Glacial Geology of Antarctica

Glaciology and Glacial Geology of Antarctica
Title Glaciology and Glacial Geology of Antarctica PDF eBook
Author James P. Minard
Publisher
Pages 64
Release 1961
Genre Geology
ISBN

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Glaciology and glacial geology of Antarctica, by J.P.Minard

Glaciology and glacial geology of Antarctica, by J.P.Minard
Title Glaciology and glacial geology of Antarctica, by J.P.Minard PDF eBook
Author United States. Antarctic Projects Office
Publisher
Pages
Release
Genre Geology
ISBN

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Radioglaciology

Radioglaciology
Title Radioglaciology PDF eBook
Author V.V. Bogorodsky
Publisher Springer Science & Business Media
Pages 265
Release 2012-12-06
Genre Science
ISBN 9400952759

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Antarctica, the sixth continent, was discovered more than 160 years ago. Since then this large, mysterious continent of ice and penguins has attracted world interest. Scientific expeditions from various countries have begun to study the geographical and natural conditions of the icy continent. Systematic and comprehensive inves tigations in the Antarctic started in the middle of our century. In 1956 the First Soviet Antarctic Expedition headed to the coast of Antarctica. Their program included studies of the atmosphere, hydrosphere and cryosphere. Thirty years have since passed. Scientists have unveiled many secrets of Antarctica: significant geophysical processes have been investigated, and a large body of new information on the Antarctic weather, Southern Ocean hydrology and Antarctic glaciers has been obtained. We can now claim that the horizons of polar geo physics, oceanology, and particularly glaciology, have expanded. Scientific inves tigators have obtained new information about all Antarctic regions and thus have created the opportunity to use the Antarctic in the interests of mankind.

Glaciology and Glacial Geology of Antarctica. By James P. Minard. [With a Map.].

Glaciology and Glacial Geology of Antarctica. By James P. Minard. [With a Map.].
Title Glaciology and Glacial Geology of Antarctica. By James P. Minard. [With a Map.]. PDF eBook
Author United States. Office of the United States Antarctic Projects Officer
Publisher
Pages 44
Release 1961
Genre
ISBN

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Glaciology

Glaciology
Title Glaciology PDF eBook
Author Charles Seymour Wright
Publisher
Pages 626
Release 1922
Genre Antarctica
ISBN

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Field Techniques in Glaciology and Glacial Geomorphology

Field Techniques in Glaciology and Glacial Geomorphology
Title Field Techniques in Glaciology and Glacial Geomorphology PDF eBook
Author Bryn Hubbard
Publisher John Wiley & Sons
Pages 412
Release 2005-07-08
Genre Science
ISBN 0470015160

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Field Techniques in Glaciology and Glacial Geomorphology is the first text to provide this essential information in a single comprehensive volume. Coverage includes: The role of field data acquisition in the broader disciplines of glaciology and glacial geomorphology Logistical preparations for fieldwork Field techniques in glaciology such as investigations on ice and meltwaters Field techniques in glacial geomorphology ranging from investigations on glacial landforms and sediments International case studies show each method in practice

Glaciology for Glacial Geologists

Glaciology for Glacial Geologists
Title Glaciology for Glacial Geologists PDF eBook
Author Terence J. Hughes
Publisher
Pages 0
Release 2018
Genre History
ISBN 9781536127935

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We live in the Quaternary Ice Age, the last million years when large ice sheets covered much of North America and Eurasia, with successive glaciations lasting about 90,000 years interspersed with interglaciations lasting about 10,000 years, such as our preset Holocene interglaciation. Quaternary glaciations were discovered and mapped by glacial geologists from evidence for glacial erosion and deposition on a large scale. Glaciology began as a descriptive branch of geology and has become a quantitative branch of physics. Glaciology and glacial geology are two sides of the same coin. Glaciologists study ice dynamics to model present and past ice sheets. Glacial geologists study the evidence produced by ice dynamics, evidence that controls the models. This book is written for glacial geologists that have a modest exposure to mathematics so they can understand the fundamental link between glaciology and glacial geology. This link is the height of an ice sheet above its bed. Ice height depends primarily on the strength of ice-bed coupling. The stronger the coupling, the higher the ice, and therefore the larger the ice sheet. Glacial geology allows an assessment of ice-bed coupling. Coupling weakens under the interior of an ice sheet when a frozen bed thaws and thereby allows ice to slide over the bed to produce glacial geology by erosion and deposition processes. Coupling weakens much more near ice-sheet margins where ice moves as fast currents called ice streams, under which ice-bed coupling vanishes where basal water drowns bedrock bumps or soaks basal sediments. The book consists of seven chapters. Chapter One shows how glacial geology can be used to quantify the strength of ice-bed coupling. Chapter Two quantifies how coupling is weakened when a frozen bed thaws for slow sheet flow in the interior of an ice sheet, thereby lowering the ice surface. Chapter Three quantifies how the surface is lowered much more toward the margin of an ice sheet where basal water partly downs the bed along linear topography (river valleys, coastal straits, etc.), allowing for slow sheet flow to become fast stream flow. Chapter Four quantifies the ability of large partly confined floating ice shelves to reduce the discharge from fast ice streams entering the sea. Chapter Five discusses glacial geology produced by Northern Hemisphere ice sheets during a cycle of Quaternary glaciation, with a white hole needed to initiate an ice sheet, marine ice transgression needed to grow it, and marine ice instability needed to terminate it; these are all linked to glacial geology. Chapter Six shows how the Arctic ice sheet can be reconstructed during a cycle of Quaternary glaciation using glacial geology. Chapter Seven shows how glacial geology can be mapped under the Antarctic ice sheet as it exists today, with an emphasis on ongoing gravitational collapse of the Western Antarctic Ice Sheet, grounded mostly below sea level in the Western Hemisphere.