About Glacier
Glaciers are made up of fallen snow that, over many years, compresses
into large, thickened ice masses. Glaciers form when snow remains in
one location long enough to transform into ice. What makes glaciers unique
is their ability to move. Due to sheer mass, glaciers flow like very
slow rivers. Some glaciers are as small as football fields, while others
grow to be over a hundred kilometers long.
Presently, glaciers occupy about 10 percent of the world's total land
area, with most located in polar regions like Antarctica and Greenland.
Glaciers can be thought as remnants from the last Ice Age, when ice covered
nearly 32 percent of the land, and 30 percent of the oceans. An Ice Age
occurs when cool temperature endure for extended periods of time, allowing
polar ice to advance into lower latitudes. For example, during the last
Ice Age, giant glacial ice sheets extended from the poles to cover most
of Canada, all of New England, much of the upper Midwest, large areas
of Alaska, most of Greenland, Iceland, Svalbard and other arctic islands,
Scandinavia, much of Great Britain and Ireland, and the northwestern
part of the former Soviet Union.
Within the past 750,000 years, scientists know that there have been
eight Ice Age cycles, separated by warmer periods called interglacial
periods. Currently, the Earth is nearing the end of an interglacial,
meaning that another Ice Age is due in a few thousand years. This is
part of the normal climate variation cycle. Greenhouse warming may delay
the onset of another glacial era, but scientists still have many questions
to answer about climate change. Although glaciers change very slowly
over long periods, they may provide important global climate change signals.
http://nsidc.org/cryosphere/glaciers/questions/what.html
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