Exam code:9GE0
The Cryosphere
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The cryosphere is all the frozen regions on Earth and covers 13% of the planet’s surface
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The term comes from the Greek word ‘kryo’, meaning cold
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Ice can be found in
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High latitudes – Arctic and Antarctic Circles of more than 65° north and south of the equator
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High altitudes – found in mountain ranges, which can be at any latitude (Drakensberg Mountains, SA is over 3000m high at a latitude of 29° south of the equator)
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Features of the cryosphere include:
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Snow
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Ice (69% of the world’s freshwater is stored as ice)
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Permafrost and frozen ground – not all frozen ground is permafrost
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Glaciers
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Ice caps, sheets and shelves
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Icebergs
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Sea, river and lake ice
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Most of the cryosphere is found in Antarctica (85%) and the Arctic polar region (12%), as ice sheets, shelf ice, and permafrost
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The largest, single ice mass on Earth is the Antarctic ice sheet, covering 8.3% of the global land surface
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It took millions of years to form; is up to 4.8 km (3 mi) deep in parts; and covers approx. 14 million km² (5.4 million mi²) and contains 30 million km³ of ice
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If it melted, it could raise sea levels by 58 meters (190 feet)
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Permafrost areas are significant global carbon stores and help regulate levels of carbon in the atmosphere
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The cryosphere helps regulate Earth’s climate through its high surface albedo effect
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As the climate warms, the cryosphere also changes through feedback mechanisms, which further influences the climate:
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Increased snow and ice melt, exposes more dark surfaces to insolation
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Which increases surface absorption of solar radiation, causing further melting and release of stored carbon and methane into the atmosphere, which leads to further atmospheric warming
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This is a positive feedback loop, which exacerbates the impacts of climate change
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Classification of Ice Masses
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There are two groups of ice masses:
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Constrained – these do not have a dome-like structure, so the flow and shape of the ice is influenced by its surroundings – valley, piedmont and cirque glaciers
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Unconstrained – the flow and shape of this ice is not influenced by its surroundings – ice sheets, shelves and caps
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These have the basic shape of a broad, slowly moving, central dome, with channels of faster-moving ice that flows to, and at, its margins
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Unconstrained
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Ice sheets
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Continuous masses of ice, that cover areas greater than 50,000 km³
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With no surrounding mountains or features to contain them, continental glaciers spread out and cover the surface
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They spread out from the centre and can cover whole valleys, plains and mountain ranges with ice
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Sometimes only the tips of mountain peaks show above the ice, called nunataks
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In 2009, Antarctic scientists found a mountain range, as large as the European Alps, hidden under 2.5 miles (4km) of ice
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Ice caps
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Cover areas of less than 50,000km³
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Usually centred on a mountain’s high point (called a massif), the ice flows flow in multiple directions to form a cap
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This flow of ice feeds into a series of glaciers at its edges
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Polar ice caps are not strictly ‘caps’ as they are greater than 50,000km³
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Ice shelves
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These are thick, floating slabs of ice, permanently attached to a landmass
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Found where ice flows down to the coast and out onto the ocean’s surface
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Only found in Greenland, Northern Canada, Antarctica and the Russian Arctic
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Constrained
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Ice fields
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Ice that covers a mountain plateau, but does not extend the high-altitude area
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Not thick enough to bury the topography and covers 5 -1500km³
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Examples include the Himalayas, Rockies, Andes, and the Southern Alps of New Zealand
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Piedmont glaciers
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Found at the foot of mountains, where a mass of ice has flowed downslope and fans out, forming lobes of continuous ice
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Valley glacier
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Ice is surrounded by high mountains and fills the valley
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They are usually ribbon-shaped and vary in length from a few kilometres to over 100km
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They can be a single feature or made up of multiple glacial tributaries from surrounding valleys
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Most begin as mountain glaciers and spread/flow to gorges, basins and across the valley floor
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Examples include the Andes, Himalayas and European Alps
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Cirque glaciers
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Most common type of glacier and found in nearly all areas where snow and ice accumulate – e.g. alpine regions
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Confined to either the upper parts of a glacial trough or within the hollowed, cirque basin itself
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It is the basin that dictates the size, shape and flow of the glacier
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Niche glaciers are smaller versions of cirque glaciers
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Thermal regime of ice masses
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This refers to an ice mass’s basal temperature and indicates whether water or ice will be present
Pressure melting point (pmp)
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The temperature at which ice melts at a given pressure is the pressure melting point (pmp)
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The melting point of water depends on air pressure above the ice
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As air pressure increases, the temperature at which ice melts lowers
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At 1 atmosphere pressure, the melting point of ice is 0°C
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At 200 atmospheres, the melting point decreases to -1.85°C
Warm-based glaciers
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Occur in temperate regions such as southern Iceland and western Norway
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They are relatively small and range in width from hundreds of meters to a few kilometres
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Melting occurs during the summer months
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It is this meltwater that ‘lubricates‘ the base and sides of the glacier, which assists movement (called basal sliding) and increases rates of erosion, transportation and deposition
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As such, all ice in these glaciers is at, or close to, the melting point of ice
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Temperatures at the base are, therefore, at or just above the pressure melting point
Cold-based glaciers
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Occur in polar regions such as central Greenland and Antarctica
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They are large, vast sheets and caps of ice covering hundreds of km²
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Temperatures remain below melting point, with low rates of precipitation, resulting in low levels of accumulation
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Basal temperatures remain below the pmp, therefore, basal sliding does not happen
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This results in little erosion, transportation and deposition
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Any movement is by internal deformation
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The ice stays frozen to the bedrock and moves slowly at 1-2cm a day
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Orientation of the ice crystals in the glacier, to the direction of movement, allows the crystals to slide over each other
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Polythermal glaciers
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These are glaciers with both warm and cold bases but at different altitudes
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They usually show a cold base in their upper reaches (high altitudes)
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At the lower altitudes, their bases are warm with meltwater
Present Day Distribution of Ice Sheets
Past glaciation
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The last glacial maximum was 21,000 years BP, where over 30% of the Earth’s surface was glaciated
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The polar ice sheets covered much of the UK and major parts of southern Europe were periglacial
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Sea levels dropped, and shorelines extended farther out, creating more land (water was trapped in ice sheets)
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The climate was drier, because most of the water on Earth’s surface was ice, resulting in less precipitation
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Earth’s average temperature was 6°C (average now is 14-15°C)

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The present-day distribution of cold environments can be divided into polar, glacial, alpine and periglacial areas
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Polar – considered areas of permanent ice within the northern and southern extremes of the Antarctic and Arctic regions
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They are found in areas of high latitude, with long winters and short summers, with high levels of storms and cold winds
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The Arctic polar environment can be defined either by the Arctic circle at 66° N or by the July isotherm of 10° C
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Isotherms are areas of the same temperature
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July is the hottest month and areas north of this line have an average of 10°C or below
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Winter sea ice is shrinking
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The Antarctic is much colder than the Arctic, with strong westerly winds, cold oceans and a large landmass
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Winter sea ice is increasing
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Defined by the 10°C January isotherm (January is the hottest month in the southern hemisphere)
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Other examples include Greenland and northern Canada

Upland Glaciated Landscapes Today
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Glaciated landscapes vary, dependent on location – polar, glacial, periglacial and alpine
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Glaciated landscapes can be divided into active (current) or relict (past) landscapes
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Geology influences the nature of a glaciated landscape
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Igneous rock is harder to erode and often makes up high mountains with steep sides and hollows
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Large amounts of poorly sorted sand, gravel, and boulders are plucked and pried from the surface and mountains
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As the glacier flows over bedrock, the sediments trapped in the ice, are ground into a fine powder called rock flour
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Rock flour acts as sandpaper, that polishes the surface of exposed rock to a smooth finish called glacial polish
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Larger rock pieces scrape over the surface creating grooves called glacial striations
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The Highlands of Scotland, the Lake District and Snowdonia (Eryri), North Wales show many relict landscapes from the Pleistocene epoch, including arêtes, erratics, cirques/corries, and corrie lakes
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Sedimentary and metamorphic rocks are found mainly in low-lying areas (already eroded from the uplands) and are easier to erode
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During the last Ice Age, the advancing ice sheet moved chalk, boulder clay etc. into the south and east of England
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