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Some of the features created by glaciers in North America include the Great Lakes, Niagara Falls, Yosemite Valley, and the Finger Lakes in New York. These features were formed through the process of glaciation during the last Ice Age.
Cirques. They are the bowl-shaped depressions formed by the erosion of glaciers in the upper parts of alpine valleys.
The bottom of alpine glaciers are rugged or rough, so they create a rugged landscape. They move because when the bottom of them melt, the water produced allows it to slide. (they typically move downhill) From a science book "Earth's Changing Surface" by Holt Science & Technology.
Cirques are bowl-like features cut into mountains or hills where glaciers form. They are typically found at high elevations and are formed by the erosive action of glaciers carving out the landscape.
The Great Lakes were created by glaciers in the last ice age.
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Glaciers formed in mountains are called mountain glaciers or alpine glaciers. They are found in high-altitude regions and flow downhill through valleys.
An alpine glacier is a glacier that FORMED on a mountain. It doesn't have to BE on a mountain, just formed on one.
Sharp pyramid-shaped peaks formed by alpine glaciers are called horn glaciers. Horn glaciers are created when three or more cirque glaciers erode a mountain from different sides, leaving behind a sharp-edged peak. Famous examples include the Matterhorn in the Alps.
Alpine glaciers can be found on high mountain slopes, valleys, and peaks. They are formed by the accumulation and compression of snow over many years in cold, mountainous regions.
Glaciers are ice sheets. There are 2 kinds of glaciers: alpine glaciers and continental glaciers. Alpine glaciers are formed when valleys above the snow line fill with ice and snow. Snow is compacted and gradually begins to flow downhill due to gravity. -Cham11
A cirque is a glacial landform that resembles an armchair. It is a bowl-shaped hollow with steep sides formed at the head of a glacier where ice erosion and plucking have occurred.
Cirques. They are the bowl-shaped depressions formed by the erosion of glaciers in the upper parts of alpine valleys.
The bottom of alpine glaciers are rugged or rough, so they create a rugged landscape. They move because when the bottom of them melt, the water produced allows it to slide. (they typically move downhill) From a science book "Earth's Changing Surface" by Holt Science & Technology.
Steams flowing in tunnels beneath glaciers deposit sand and gravel
Cirques are bowl-like features cut into mountains or hills where glaciers form. They are typically found at high elevations and are formed by the erosive action of glaciers carving out the landscape.
Glaciers changed the face of North America with the following effects:An ice sheet covered most of Canada.The southwest received heavy rains.