Geography A Level Edexcel
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1-1-risk-of-tectonic-hazards3 主题
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1-2-tectonic-hazards-and-impacts3 主题
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1-3-management-of-tectonic-hazards4 主题
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2-1-climate-change-and-glaciated-landscapes4 主题
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2-2-glacial-processes3 主题
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2-3-glacial-landforms-and-landscapes3 主题
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2-4-management-of-glaciated-landscapes4 主题
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3-1-coastal-processes3 主题
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3-2-coastal-landforms-and-landscapes3 主题
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3-3-coastal-erosion-and-sea-level-change3 主题
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3-4-coastal-management4 主题
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4-1-causes-of-globalisation3 主题
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4-2-impacts-of-globalisation3 主题
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4-3-consequences-of-globalisation3 主题
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5-1-place-variation3 主题
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5-2-regeneration3 主题
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5-3-management-of-regeneration3 主题
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5-4-success-of-regeneration3 主题
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6-1-population-structure-variation3 主题
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6-2-diverse-living-spaces3 主题
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6-3-demographic-and-cultural-tensions3 主题
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6-4-management-and-stakeholders3 主题
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7-1-hydrological-cycle3 主题
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7-2-factors-influencing-the-hydrological-system3 主题
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7-3-water-insecurity3 主题
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8-1-carbon-cycle3 主题
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8-2-increasing-energy-demand3 主题
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8-3-global-climate-system-links-to-carbon-and-water-cycles3 主题
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9-1-superpowers3 主题
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9-2-impacts-of-superpowers3 主题
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9-3-superpowers-and-spheres-of-influence3 主题
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10-1-human-development3 主题
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10-2-human-rights3 主题
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10-3-human-rights-and-intervention3 主题
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10-4-interventions-and-outcomes3 主题
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11-1-globalisation-and-migration3 主题
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11-2-nation-states3 主题
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11-3-managing-global-issues-and-conflicts3 主题
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11-4-threats-to-national-sovereignty3 主题
2-3-2-glacial-deposition-landforms-and-landscapes
Exam code:9GE0
Glacial Deposition
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When debris is deposited by the ice mass and not meltwater, it is called ice contact deposition
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During the warmer summer months, glaciers begin to melt, and glacial till is deposited on the valley floor or sides of a moving glacier
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Till is unsorted, irregular debris ranging from clay to stones to boulders of any size and shape
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Features of ice contact deposition include erratics, moraines, and drumlins
Erratics
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Erratics are random boulders of different sizes and types from the area where they are found
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There is no pattern to their deposition, and they look completely out of place on the landscape
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Glaciers pick up large rocks and carry them hundreds, sometimes thousands of kilometres from where they originate
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Erratics from Scandinavia have been found in boulder clay of the North East of England coastline
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Erratics are carried deep in the ice and do not erode the same as till at the edges of the glacier
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An example is the Great Stone of Fourstones, (Big Stone) on the moors of Tatham Fells, England

Moraines
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Unsorted glacial till that is deposited in mounds are called moraines
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Moraines are termed from their position on the glacier:
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Terminal: Material deposited at the snout of the glacier
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Lateral: Material is deposited along both sides of the glacier
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Medial: Ridge of deposited material in the middle where two glaciers meet and continue to flow downhill together
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Ground: Material dragged under the base of the glacier and deposited over a wide area on the valley floor
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Recessional: They show the point of glacial retreat
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Push: They form if the glacier advances after retreat
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Drumlins
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Drumlins are elongated, egg-shaped hills and made of glacial till
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They form beneath the glacier when the glacier meets an obstruction and material is deposited as a ground moraine
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The moraine is then shaped by the moving ice, which follows the direction of the flow of ice
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The largest ones can be over 1km in length, 0.5km wide, and 50m high
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Multiple drumlins are known as swarms or baskets of eggs
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As the material is deposited it builds up to have a round, blunt, and steep front (stoss) end
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The flow of ice over the top of the drumlin drags the material along and down creating the lee slope
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The lee is gently sloped, elongated, and with a tapered tail
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The more elongated the drumlin the faster the ice was flowing
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Examples include The Drumlin Field below Cam Fell in the Yorkshire Dales and Conway Valley, North Wales

Lowland Deposition Features
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Lowland ice contact depositional features include:
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Till plain
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Lodgement till
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Ablation till
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Till plains or ground moraine
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When the ice mass retreats during the warmer months, till is deposited over a vast area across the valley floor
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Meltwater will also flow out of the glacier’s snout forming meltwater rivers
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These rivers carry large amounts of glacial till, which will undergo further erosion through attrition to become outwash
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This finer till is sorted and when the energy of the river reduces, the outwash is deposited in layers further down the valley on the outwash plain

Lodgement till
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Found mainly with slow-moving glaciers which carry more debris sub-glacially
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Lodgement till is subglacial unconsolidated material that is forced, or ‘lodged’ into the bedrock below
Ablation till
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Ablation till includes supra and englacial material deposited as the glacier melts

Former Ice Extent Reconstruction
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Landforms of glacial deposition are useful in understanding the direction and extent of ice cover – striations are deepest at initial point of contact
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It also provides a record of past glacial changes over a longer timeframe than current observational records
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Past temperatures and levels of precipitation can be measured with ice cores, indicating past glacial climates
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Orientation of the landform can indication glacial direction and upland or lowland landforms can be a good indicator of actual ice mass – crag and tail as a macro feature needing a large ice mass to deform around resistant rock rather than flow over as in the meso landform of roches moutonnées
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Debris analysis can indicate distance travelled, as in the case of the Scandinavian erratics; or the rate of travel as in drumlin swarms, as slow moving glaciers carry more till
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Morainic ridges indicate edges of ice sheets or glacial snouts in instances of glacial retreat
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