The facts below describe how glaciers are formed. Put them into the right order by
numbering them. Then draw a diagram in the box and use the facts, in note form, to
label it.
• The weight of the glacier puts pressure on the land underneath and makes the valley floors.
• The snow builds up over several years because it falls more often than it melts.
• The pressure of the new snow, over thousands of years, causes the underlying snow to turn to ice.
• The glacier carves out and shifts rock as it moves.
• The air is forced out of the ice, so that its colour appears to be blue.
Answers
Answer:
How are glaciers formed?
Glaciers begin to form when snow remains in the same area year-round, where enough snow accumulates to transform into ice. Each year, new layers of snow bury and compress the previous layers. This compression forces the snow to re-crystallize, forming grains similar in size and shape to grains of sugar. Gradually the grains grow larger and the air pockets between the grains get smaller, causing the snow to slowly compact and increase in density. After about a year, the snow turns into firn—an intermediate state between snow and glacier ice. At this point, it is about two-thirds as dense as water. Over time, larger ice crystals become so compressed that any air pockets between them are very tiny. In very old glacier ice, crystals can reach several inches in length. For most glaciers, this process takes more than a hundred years.