Grinnell Glacier Ridge 2016
Glaciers and Icecaps
Glaciers are a big item when we talk about the world's water supply. Almost 10 percent of the world's land mass is currently covered with glaciers, mostly in places like Greenland and Antarctica. You can think of a glacier as a frozen river, and like rivers, they "flow" downhill, erode the landscape, and move water along in the Earth's water cycle.
• Water Science School HOME • Surface Water topics • Water Basics topics •
Glaciers and icecaps: storehouses of freshwater
Even though you've maybe never seen a glacier or massive extents of ice, they are a big item when we talk about the world's water supply. Almost 10 percent of the world's land mass is currently covered with glaciers and ice caps, mostly in places like Greenland and Antarctica. Glaciers are important features in Earth's water cycle and affect the volume, variability, and water quality of runoff in areas where they occur.
In a way, glaciers are just frozen rivers of ice flowing downhill. Glaciers begin life as snowflakes. When the snowfall in an area far exceeds the melting that occurs during summer, glaciers start to form. The weight of the accumulated snow compresses the fallen snow into ice. These "rivers" of ice are tremendously heavy, and if they are on land that has a downhill slope the whole ice patch starts to slowly grind its way downhill. These glaciers can vary greatly in size, from a football-field sized patch to an ice patch a hundred miles (161 kilometers) long.
Glaciers affect the landscape
Glaciers have had a profound effect on the topography (lay of the land) in some areas, as in the northern U.S. You can imagine how a trillion-ton ice cube can rearrange the landscape as it slowly grinds its way overland. In this picture you can see the bowl-shaped valley in a glacial valley in Wyoming where an ancient glacier forced its way through the landscape. Many lakes, such as the Great Lakes, and valleys have been carved out by ancient glaciers. A massive icecap can be found in Greenland, where practically the whole country is covered with ice (shouldn't it be called Whiteland)? The ice on Greenland approaches two miles (3.2 kilometers) in thickness in some places and is so heavy that some of the land has been compressed so much that it is way below sea level.
Here's a map of where glaciers and icecaps exist in the world. White areas show glaciers and ice sheets around the world. The white spots in the oceans are islands where glaciers are found.
Ice and glaciers come and go
There are many long-term weather patterns that the Earth goes through. The climate, on a global scale, is always changing, although usually not at a rate fast enough for people to notice. There have been many warm periods, such as when the dinosaurs lived and many cold periods, such as the last ice age of about 20,000 years ago. During the last ice age much of the northern hemisphere was covered in ice and glaciers, and, as this map of Europe shows.
Glaciers are still around today; tens of thousands of them are in Alaska. Climatic factors still affect them today and during the current warmer climate today, they can retreat in size at a rate easily measured on a yearly scale.
Some glacier and icecap facts
- Glaciers store about 69% of the world's freshwater, and if all land ice melted the seas would rise about 230 feet¹ (70 meters)(NSIDC).
- During the last ice age (when glaciers covered more land area than today) the sea level was about 400 feet (122 meters) lower than it is today. At that time, glaciers covered almost one-third of the land.
- During the last warm spell, 125,000 years ago, the seas were about 18 feet (5.5 meters) higher than they are today. About three million years ago the seas could have been up to 165 feet (50 meters) higher.
- North America's longest glacier is the Bering Glacier in Alaska, measuring 127 miles (204 kilometers) long.
- Glacial ice can be very old—in some Canadian Arctic icecaps, ice at the base is over 100 000 years old.
- The land underneath parts of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet may be up to 1.5 miles (2.5 kilometers) below sea level, due to the weight of the ice.
- Antarctic ice shelves may calve icebergs that are over 50 miles (80 kilometers) long.
- The Kutiah Glacier in Pakistan holds the record for the fastest glacial surge. In 1953, it raced more than 7.5 miles (12 kilometers) in 3 months, averaging about 380 feet (112 meters) per day.
- Glacial ice often appears blue when it has become very dense. Years of compression gradually make the ice denser over time, forcing out the tiny air pockets between crystals. When glacier ice becomes extremely dense, the ice absorbs all other colors in the spectrum and reflects primarily blue, which is what we see. When glacier ice is white, that usually means that there are many tiny air bubbles still in the ice.
►► Facts and myths about glaciers
Do you really like glaciers?
If so, vote for your favorite water body in our Activity Center!
Sources and more information
- ¹National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC)
- Glacier and Landscape Change in Response to Changing Climate, USGS
- A Strategy for Monitoring Glaciers, USGS Circular 1132
Activity icon made by Eucalyp from www.flaticon.com
Learn more about glaciers, icecaps, and related topics.
Ice, Snow, and Glaciers and the Water Cycle
Glaciers: Things to Know
Pictures about glaciers and ice:
Grinnell Glacier Ridge 2016
Glaciers
As this picture of Muir and Riggs Glaceris in Alaska shows, glaciers are really rivers, but rivers of solid ice instead of liquid water. Just because they are solid does not mean they don't move, though. Glaciers do flow downhill, just very, very slowly.
Glaciers
As this picture of Muir and Riggs Glaceris in Alaska shows, glaciers are really rivers, but rivers of solid ice instead of liquid water. Just because they are solid does not mean they don't move, though. Glaciers do flow downhill, just very, very slowly.
Publications about glaciers and ice caps:
State of the Earth’s cryosphere at the beginning of the 21st century : glaciers, global snow cover, floating ice, and permafrost and periglacial environments: Chapter A in Satellite image atlas of glaciers of the world
Fifty-year record of glacier change reveals shifting climate in the Pacific Northwest and Alaska, USA
Below is a list of Frequently Asked Questions associated with glaciers and ice caps.
What is a glacier?
A glacier is a large, perennial accumulation of crystalline ice, snow, rock, sediment, and often liquid water that originates on land and moves down slope under the influence of its own weight and gravity. Typically, glaciers exist and may even form in areas where: mean annual temperatures are close to the freezing point winter precipitation produces significant accumulations of snow temperatures...
How would sea level change if all glaciers melted?
There is still some uncertainty about the full volume of glaciers and ice caps on Earth, but if all of them were to melt, global sea level would rise approximately 70 meters (approximately 230 feet), flooding every coastal city on the planet. Learn more: USGS Water Science School: Glaciers and Icecaps National Snow and Ice Data Center: Facts about Glaciers U.S. Global Change Research Program: Sea...
How do we know glaciers are shrinking?
Repeat photography and aerial / satellite photo analysis provide evidence of glacier loss in terms of shape and area. The USGS Benchmark Glacier project has collected mass balance data on a network of glaciers in Alaska, Washington, and Montana for decades, quantifying trends of mass loss at all sites. Extensive field data collection at these sites includes twice yearly visits to measure seasonal...
How much of the Earth's water is stored in glaciers?
About 2.1% of all of Earth's water is frozen in glaciers. 97.2% is in the oceans and inland seas 2.1% is in glaciers 0.6% is in groundwater and soil moisture less than 1% is in the atmosphere less than 1% is in lakes and rivers less than 1% is in all living plants and animals. About three-quarters of Earth's freshwater is stored in glaciers. Therefore, glacier ice is the second largest reservoir...
Glaciers are a big item when we talk about the world's water supply. Almost 10 percent of the world's land mass is currently covered with glaciers, mostly in places like Greenland and Antarctica. You can think of a glacier as a frozen river, and like rivers, they "flow" downhill, erode the landscape, and move water along in the Earth's water cycle.
• Water Science School HOME • Surface Water topics • Water Basics topics •
Glaciers and icecaps: storehouses of freshwater
Even though you've maybe never seen a glacier or massive extents of ice, they are a big item when we talk about the world's water supply. Almost 10 percent of the world's land mass is currently covered with glaciers and ice caps, mostly in places like Greenland and Antarctica. Glaciers are important features in Earth's water cycle and affect the volume, variability, and water quality of runoff in areas where they occur.
In a way, glaciers are just frozen rivers of ice flowing downhill. Glaciers begin life as snowflakes. When the snowfall in an area far exceeds the melting that occurs during summer, glaciers start to form. The weight of the accumulated snow compresses the fallen snow into ice. These "rivers" of ice are tremendously heavy, and if they are on land that has a downhill slope the whole ice patch starts to slowly grind its way downhill. These glaciers can vary greatly in size, from a football-field sized patch to an ice patch a hundred miles (161 kilometers) long.
Glaciers affect the landscape
Glaciers have had a profound effect on the topography (lay of the land) in some areas, as in the northern U.S. You can imagine how a trillion-ton ice cube can rearrange the landscape as it slowly grinds its way overland. In this picture you can see the bowl-shaped valley in a glacial valley in Wyoming where an ancient glacier forced its way through the landscape. Many lakes, such as the Great Lakes, and valleys have been carved out by ancient glaciers. A massive icecap can be found in Greenland, where practically the whole country is covered with ice (shouldn't it be called Whiteland)? The ice on Greenland approaches two miles (3.2 kilometers) in thickness in some places and is so heavy that some of the land has been compressed so much that it is way below sea level.
Here's a map of where glaciers and icecaps exist in the world. White areas show glaciers and ice sheets around the world. The white spots in the oceans are islands where glaciers are found.
Ice and glaciers come and go
There are many long-term weather patterns that the Earth goes through. The climate, on a global scale, is always changing, although usually not at a rate fast enough for people to notice. There have been many warm periods, such as when the dinosaurs lived and many cold periods, such as the last ice age of about 20,000 years ago. During the last ice age much of the northern hemisphere was covered in ice and glaciers, and, as this map of Europe shows.
Glaciers are still around today; tens of thousands of them are in Alaska. Climatic factors still affect them today and during the current warmer climate today, they can retreat in size at a rate easily measured on a yearly scale.
Some glacier and icecap facts
- Glaciers store about 69% of the world's freshwater, and if all land ice melted the seas would rise about 230 feet¹ (70 meters)(NSIDC).
- During the last ice age (when glaciers covered more land area than today) the sea level was about 400 feet (122 meters) lower than it is today. At that time, glaciers covered almost one-third of the land.
- During the last warm spell, 125,000 years ago, the seas were about 18 feet (5.5 meters) higher than they are today. About three million years ago the seas could have been up to 165 feet (50 meters) higher.
- North America's longest glacier is the Bering Glacier in Alaska, measuring 127 miles (204 kilometers) long.
- Glacial ice can be very old—in some Canadian Arctic icecaps, ice at the base is over 100 000 years old.
- The land underneath parts of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet may be up to 1.5 miles (2.5 kilometers) below sea level, due to the weight of the ice.
- Antarctic ice shelves may calve icebergs that are over 50 miles (80 kilometers) long.
- The Kutiah Glacier in Pakistan holds the record for the fastest glacial surge. In 1953, it raced more than 7.5 miles (12 kilometers) in 3 months, averaging about 380 feet (112 meters) per day.
- Glacial ice often appears blue when it has become very dense. Years of compression gradually make the ice denser over time, forcing out the tiny air pockets between crystals. When glacier ice becomes extremely dense, the ice absorbs all other colors in the spectrum and reflects primarily blue, which is what we see. When glacier ice is white, that usually means that there are many tiny air bubbles still in the ice.
►► Facts and myths about glaciers
Do you really like glaciers?
If so, vote for your favorite water body in our Activity Center!
Sources and more information
- ¹National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC)
- Glacier and Landscape Change in Response to Changing Climate, USGS
- A Strategy for Monitoring Glaciers, USGS Circular 1132
Activity icon made by Eucalyp from www.flaticon.com
Learn more about glaciers, icecaps, and related topics.
Ice, Snow, and Glaciers and the Water Cycle
Glaciers: Things to Know
Pictures about glaciers and ice:
Grinnell Glacier Ridge 2016
Grinnell Glacier Ridge 2016
Glaciers
As this picture of Muir and Riggs Glaceris in Alaska shows, glaciers are really rivers, but rivers of solid ice instead of liquid water. Just because they are solid does not mean they don't move, though. Glaciers do flow downhill, just very, very slowly.
Glaciers
As this picture of Muir and Riggs Glaceris in Alaska shows, glaciers are really rivers, but rivers of solid ice instead of liquid water. Just because they are solid does not mean they don't move, though. Glaciers do flow downhill, just very, very slowly.
Publications about glaciers and ice caps:
State of the Earth’s cryosphere at the beginning of the 21st century : glaciers, global snow cover, floating ice, and permafrost and periglacial environments: Chapter A in Satellite image atlas of glaciers of the world
Fifty-year record of glacier change reveals shifting climate in the Pacific Northwest and Alaska, USA
Below is a list of Frequently Asked Questions associated with glaciers and ice caps.
What is a glacier?
A glacier is a large, perennial accumulation of crystalline ice, snow, rock, sediment, and often liquid water that originates on land and moves down slope under the influence of its own weight and gravity. Typically, glaciers exist and may even form in areas where: mean annual temperatures are close to the freezing point winter precipitation produces significant accumulations of snow temperatures...
How would sea level change if all glaciers melted?
There is still some uncertainty about the full volume of glaciers and ice caps on Earth, but if all of them were to melt, global sea level would rise approximately 70 meters (approximately 230 feet), flooding every coastal city on the planet. Learn more: USGS Water Science School: Glaciers and Icecaps National Snow and Ice Data Center: Facts about Glaciers U.S. Global Change Research Program: Sea...
How do we know glaciers are shrinking?
Repeat photography and aerial / satellite photo analysis provide evidence of glacier loss in terms of shape and area. The USGS Benchmark Glacier project has collected mass balance data on a network of glaciers in Alaska, Washington, and Montana for decades, quantifying trends of mass loss at all sites. Extensive field data collection at these sites includes twice yearly visits to measure seasonal...
How much of the Earth's water is stored in glaciers?
About 2.1% of all of Earth's water is frozen in glaciers. 97.2% is in the oceans and inland seas 2.1% is in glaciers 0.6% is in groundwater and soil moisture less than 1% is in the atmosphere less than 1% is in lakes and rivers less than 1% is in all living plants and animals. About three-quarters of Earth's freshwater is stored in glaciers. Therefore, glacier ice is the second largest reservoir...