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Periglacial

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''You may be looking for paraglacial, meaning unstable conditions related to local glaciation in the recent past.

Periglacial is an adjective referring to places in the edges of glacial areas, normally those related to past ice ages rather than those in the modern era. That is to say, at the time in question, the area was not buried by flowing ice but was subject to severe freezing.

A periglacial lake is one formed where the natural drainage of the topography is obstructed by an ice sheet, ice cap or glacier.

Periglaciation

Periglaciation is the corresponding noun. It means 'periglacial conditions', that is principally, an area of permafrost - intense freezing, perhaps with freeze/thaw of the surface. That is to say, the surface layer melts briefly in summer. Periglaciation occurs near mountain glaciers. At lower levels it forms a zone of cold around continental glaciers in areas of high latitudes, covering perhaps 20% of the earth’s land surface.

Effects

Periglacial conditions in the Pleistocene created landscapes and geological conditions moulded by frost action; the repeated freezing and thawing of material over many years. Around a third of the earth's land surface can be considered as having been subject to periglacial conditions at some time.

Periglaciation results in a variety of ground conditions but especially those involving irregular, mixed deposits created by ice wedges, solifluction, gelifluction, frost creep and rockfalls.

The resulting ecological community is known as tundra.

Factors affecting location

Landforms associated with Periglacial Environments

Coombe and head deposits Coombe deposits are chalk deposits found below chalk escarpments in Southern England. Head deposits are more common below outcrops of granite on Dartmoor.

Patterned Ground is stones which form circles, polygons and stripes. The relief of the land depends on what shape you get. A process called frost heaving is responsable for these features.

Solifluction lobes are formed when waterlogged soil slips down a slope due to gravity forming U shaped lobes.

Blockfields or Felsenmeer are large angular blocks created by freeze-thaw action, usually on flat ground. A good example of a blockfield can be found in the Snowdonia National Park, Wales.

Other landforms include:

 


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