Table of Contents
What is drift deposit?
Superficial deposits (which we used to call ‘drift’) are the youngest geological deposits formed during the most recent period of geological time, the Quaternary, which extends back about 2.6 million years from the present. They rest on older deposits or rocks referred to as bedrock.
What is the rock material deposited by glaciers as they melt and retreat?
Melting glaciers deposit all the big and small bits of rocky material they are carrying in a pile. These unsorted deposits of rock are called glacial till. A large boulder dropped by a glacier is a glacial erratic. Glacial till is found in different types of deposits.
What are some materials that make up glacial drift?
They consist of:
- Outwash: sand and gravel washed out of the glacier by running water.
- Valley Train: outwash deposited in a valley (common in areas of alpine glaciation).
- Outwash Plain: braided meltwater streams deposit sediment over a wide area (common in areas of continental glaciation).
What is drifting in geography?
In geology, drift is the name for all material of glacial origin found anywhere on land or at sea, including sediment and large rocks (glacial erratic). Glacial origin refers to erosion, transportation and deposition by glaciers. In the UK, the term ‘drift’ is commonly used to describe any deposits of Quaternary age.
What is a stationary glacier?
Glaciers that are neither advancing nor receding are stationary. The snout (or terminus) of a glacier may be stationary, but the ice itself isn’t. The terminus of a glacier is stationary when accumulation (snow) at the top of the glacier is equal to ablation (melt) at the bottom of the glacier.
Are glacial deposits sorted or unsorted?
Glacial Drift: material deposited by a glacier. Two types of drift are Till (unsorted, unstratified debris deposited directly from ice) and Stratified Drift (sorted and stratified debris deposited from glacial meltwater).
Are river deposits sorted or unsorted?
Glacial deposits
Glacial deposits are sorted, and river deposits are unsorted. 2.
What kind of rock is deposited when ice melts?
Most of this material is deposited on the ground when the ice melts, and is therefore called ablation till, a mixture of fine and coarse angular rock fragments, with much less sand, silt, and clay than lodgement till. An example is shown in Figure 16.31b.
How are rocks broken down into smaller pieces?
The process by which rock materials are broken down by the action of physical and chemical processes. The breakdown of rock into smaller pieces by physical means. Nice work! You just studied 49 terms!
What kind of sediments are found in glaciers?
The main types of sediment in a glacial environment are described below. Supraglacial (on top of the ice) and englacial (within the ice) sediments that slide off the melting front of a stationary glacier can form a ridge of unsorted sediments called an end moraine.
What kind of sediments are found in quiet water?
The sediments deposited there are called glaciomarine sediment s (Figure 6.35b). Figure 16.35 Examples of glacial sediments formed in quiet water: a: glaciolacustrine sediment with a drop stone, Nanaimo, B.C.; and b: a laminated glaciomarine sediment, Englishman River, B.C.