alpine glacier

Học thuật
Thân thiện
alpine glacier

An alpine glacier flows slowly down a steep mountain valley.

Definition

Noun: A glacier that originates in a mountainous area and flows down through a valley. This type of glacier is typically found in high-altitude regions like the Alps, the Himalayas, or the Rocky Mountains. It is characterized by its movement from a high-elevation accumulation zone down a pre-existing valley, often fed by snow and ice from surrounding mountain slopes.

Usage

The term "alpine glacier" is used to describe and classify a specific, common form of glacier based on its location and morphology. It is a standard term in geology, physical geography, and environmental science.

Examples
  • The alpine glacier carved the distinctive U-shaped valley over millennia.
  • Scientists are monitoring the retreat of the alpine glacier due to climate change.
  • Hikers can see the moraine left behind by the alpine glacier.
Advanced Usage
  • In glacial geology: The term is used to contrast with other glacier types, such as ice sheets, ice caps, or piedmont glaciers. An alpine glacier is a constituent of a mountain glacier system.
  • In climate science: The health and mass balance of alpine glaciers are key indicators of regional climate change.
Variants and Related Words
  • Valley Glacier: Often used synonymously with "alpine glacier," emphasizing its confinement to a valley.
  • Mountain Glacier: A broader term that includes alpine glaciers as well as cirque glaciers and ice caps on mountains.
  • Cirque Glacier: A smaller type of glacier that occupies a bowl-shaped hollow (a cirque) on a mountainside; it may feed into an alpine glacier.
Synonyms
  • Valley glacier
Antonyms
  • Ice sheet (a vast, continental-scale glacier that is not confined by topography, e.g., in Greenland or Antarctica)
alpine glacier

An alpine glacier flows slowly down a steep mountain valley.

Noun
  1. a glacier that moves down from a high valley