Periglacial Environments: These are like the cool cousins of glaciers! They're found hanging around the edges of glaciers and ice masses. Imagine a big, chilly place where the ground is frozen deep, and the rocks look like they've been to a rock party and come out all fractured and angular.
Each type has its own unique temperature range, dictating the intensity and frequency of periglacial processes.
Ever put a soda can in the freezer and forget about it? When water freezes, it expands (like the exploding soda can), breaking rocks into angular fragments called "scree."
Permafrost = permanent frost. It's like a never-melting popsicle in the ground!
Above this frosty layer is the "active layer," which thaws and has intense mass movements. It's thicker in some places and thinner in others, depending on various factors like latitude, rock type, and vegetation cover.
Think of a pingo like a massive, ice-cold zit on the Earth's face. They're conical hills formed from freezing water under pressure. There are two types:
A landscape like a bad baking experiment, all lumpy and hollow. It's caused by the melting of permafrost due to things like climate change or fire.
This is the Earth trying to be artistic with stone stripes, polygons, and garlands. It's created by processes like frost heave and solifluction.
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Periglacial Environments: These are like the cool cousins of glaciers! They're found hanging around the edges of glaciers and ice masses. Imagine a big, chilly place where the ground is frozen deep, and the rocks look like they've been to a rock party and come out all fractured and angular.
Each type has its own unique temperature range, dictating the intensity and frequency of periglacial processes.
Ever put a soda can in the freezer and forget about it? When water freezes, it expands (like the exploding soda can), breaking rocks into angular fragments called "scree."
Permafrost = permanent frost. It's like a never-melting popsicle in the ground!
Above this frosty layer is the "active layer," which thaws and has intense mass movements. It's thicker in some places and thinner in others, depending on various factors like latitude, rock type, and vegetation cover.
Think of a pingo like a massive, ice-cold zit on the Earth's face. They're conical hills formed from freezing water under pressure. There are two types:
A landscape like a bad baking experiment, all lumpy and hollow. It's caused by the melting of permafrost due to things like climate change or fire.
This is the Earth trying to be artistic with stone stripes, polygons, and garlands. It's created by processes like frost heave and solifluction.
Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Geography HL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 🌟