Wikibooks: A-level Geography/AS OCR Geography/Cold environments

=Types of cold environment= =Glacial= Snow and ice all year round Dry climate Temperatures stay below 0 °C =Periglacial= Significant snow and ice cover but not all year round Temperatures rise above freezing during summer Low precipitation =Upland= Once covered in snow Can be periglacial Wet climate...

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Online Access:https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/A-level_Geography/AS_OCR_Geography/Cold_environments
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spelling ftwikibooks:enwikibooks:60576:305616 2023-06-18T03:40:10+02:00 Wikibooks: A-level Geography/AS OCR Geography/Cold environments https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/A-level_Geography/AS_OCR_Geography/Cold_environments eng eng Book ftwikibooks 2023-06-02T13:41:25Z =Types of cold environment= =Glacial= Snow and ice all year round Dry climate Temperatures stay below 0 °C =Periglacial= Significant snow and ice cover but not all year round Temperatures rise above freezing during summer Low precipitation =Upland= Once covered in snow Can be periglacial Wet climate due to orographic rainfall =Processes= =Plucking= The ripping of material from the bedrock of a glacier It occurs when there is a large downwards pressure from the weight of glacier. As the glacier moves downwards friction between the basal ice of the glacier and the rock below causes melting. This water freezes to obstacles which are then plucked from the bedrock. =Abrasion= The sandpaper effect It occurs when there is material present at the base or sides of the glacier. This material is dragged along the rock erasing it. This process may cause grooves called striations to be formed. The larger and more angular material causes the most erosion. =Freeze thaw= The weathering of rock with water It occurs when water which has penetrated cracks or fractures in rock freezes. Water expands approximately 9% when it freezes so this expansion puts pressure on the rock. Repeated freezing and thawing (over many years) can lead to fracturing. As this process relies on fluctuating temperatures it is mainly seen in periglacial areas. =Chemical weathering= The weathering of carbonate rocks by carbonic acid It occurs when CO 2 in the air dissolves into rainwater forming a weak carbonic acid. CO 2 is more soluble at lower temperature so therefore the water becomes more acidic. This acid then reacts with carbonate rocks such as limestone dissolving them. =Glaciers= =Ice Formation= Snow is compressed by the weight of subsequent snowfalls. Compacted snow which has experienced a winters freezing and a summers melting is known as firn. For this to happen the summer must have low temperatures. As more snow builds onto of the firn air is squeezed out and ice is formed. Ice accumulates as more snow falls. When this ice flows downhill under ... Book Carbonic acid WikiBooks - Open-content textbooks
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description =Types of cold environment= =Glacial= Snow and ice all year round Dry climate Temperatures stay below 0 °C =Periglacial= Significant snow and ice cover but not all year round Temperatures rise above freezing during summer Low precipitation =Upland= Once covered in snow Can be periglacial Wet climate due to orographic rainfall =Processes= =Plucking= The ripping of material from the bedrock of a glacier It occurs when there is a large downwards pressure from the weight of glacier. As the glacier moves downwards friction between the basal ice of the glacier and the rock below causes melting. This water freezes to obstacles which are then plucked from the bedrock. =Abrasion= The sandpaper effect It occurs when there is material present at the base or sides of the glacier. This material is dragged along the rock erasing it. This process may cause grooves called striations to be formed. The larger and more angular material causes the most erosion. =Freeze thaw= The weathering of rock with water It occurs when water which has penetrated cracks or fractures in rock freezes. Water expands approximately 9% when it freezes so this expansion puts pressure on the rock. Repeated freezing and thawing (over many years) can lead to fracturing. As this process relies on fluctuating temperatures it is mainly seen in periglacial areas. =Chemical weathering= The weathering of carbonate rocks by carbonic acid It occurs when CO 2 in the air dissolves into rainwater forming a weak carbonic acid. CO 2 is more soluble at lower temperature so therefore the water becomes more acidic. This acid then reacts with carbonate rocks such as limestone dissolving them. =Glaciers= =Ice Formation= Snow is compressed by the weight of subsequent snowfalls. Compacted snow which has experienced a winters freezing and a summers melting is known as firn. For this to happen the summer must have low temperatures. As more snow builds onto of the firn air is squeezed out and ice is formed. Ice accumulates as more snow falls. When this ice flows downhill under ...
format Book
title Wikibooks: A-level Geography/AS OCR Geography/Cold environments
spellingShingle Wikibooks: A-level Geography/AS OCR Geography/Cold environments
title_short Wikibooks: A-level Geography/AS OCR Geography/Cold environments
title_full Wikibooks: A-level Geography/AS OCR Geography/Cold environments
title_fullStr Wikibooks: A-level Geography/AS OCR Geography/Cold environments
title_full_unstemmed Wikibooks: A-level Geography/AS OCR Geography/Cold environments
title_sort wikibooks: a-level geography/as ocr geography/cold environments
url https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/A-level_Geography/AS_OCR_Geography/Cold_environments
genre Carbonic acid
genre_facet Carbonic acid
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