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         Glaciers:     more books (100)
  1. Glacier Bay National Park: A Backcountry Guide to the Glaciers and Beyond by Jim Dufresne, 1987-07
  2. The Totally Out There Guide to Glacier National Park by Donna Love, 2010-10-15
  3. Physics of Glaciers, Third Edition by W. S. B. Paterson, 2000-09-25
  4. Moon Montana, Wyoming & Idaho Camping: Including Yellowstone, Grand Teton, and Glacier National Parks (Moon Outdoors) by Becky Lomax, 2010-06-01
  5. In the Shadow of Melting Glaciers: Climate Change and Andean Society by Mark Carey, 2010-04-07
  6. Glacier & Waterton Lakes National Park, MT - Trails Illustrated Map #215 (National Geographic Maps: Trails Illustrated) by National Geographic Maps, 2008-12-01
  7. Stars Over Montana: A Centennial Celebration of the Men Who Shaped Glacier National Park by Glacier Association, 2009-04-14
  8. Across East African Glaciers--Another Issue by Hans Meyer, 2010-10-14
  9. Blackfeet Tales of Glacier National Park by James Willard Schultz, 2010-10-14
  10. Stickeen: An Adventure With a Dog and a Glacier by John Muir, William R. Jones, 1978-06
  11. Exploring the Inside Passage to Alaska: A Cruising Guide from the San Juan Islands to Glacier Bay by Don Douglass, Reanne Hemingway-Douglass, 1995-03
  12. Tropical Glaciers (International Hydrology Series) by Georg Kaser, Henry Osmaston, 2007-01-08
  13. In the Shadow of the Glacier (Trafalgar Mystery) by Vicki Delany, 2008-03-15
  14. Living Ice: Understanding Glaciers and Glaciation by Sharp Robert P., 1991-06-28

81. Satellite Images: Glaciers
US Geological Survey Satellite Image Atlas of glaciers of the World.
http://pubs.usgs.gov/factsheet/fs133-99//
Satellite Image Atlas of Glaciers of the World
USGS Fact Sheet 133-99
The world's glaciers react to and interact with changes in global and regional climates. Most mountain glaciers worldwide have been retreating since the latter part of the 19th century; global sea level has risen about 10 centimeters during the past century. Glaciers vary in size as a result of several factors, of which climate variation is probably the most important. The reasons we are interested in glacier variation include its connection to climate change and to global sea level The present volume of the Earth's glacier ice, if totally melted, represents about 80 meters in sea-level rise. From minimum (an interglacial epoch) to maximum (an ice-age epoch) volume of glacier ice on the continents, sea level has a range of 200 meters. For example, during the last glacial peak, about 20,000 years ago, sea level is estimated to have been 120 meters lower than it is today. During a warmer climatic interval in the last interglacial period, 125,000 years ago, sea level was about 6 meters higher than it is today; during an even warmer interval 3 million years ago, sea level is estimated to have been 25 to 50 meters higher. Sea-level changes, especially in low-lying coastal areas and on islands, have significant effects on human activities and facilities. White areas show ice sheets and other glaciers around the world. The white spots in the oceans are islands where glaciers are found. Reproduced from National Geographic WORLD (February 1977, no. 18, p. 6) with permission.

82. Glaciers Ice Hockey Club
Program information for glaciers Youth Ice Hockey Club including traveland inhouse teams as well as tournament and fundraiser information.
http://www.glaciershockey.org/
WELCOME TO GLACIERS ICE HOCKEY! We hope to provide you with all the information you need to help you keep up with your busy hockey schedules. Whether it's practice or game times, team game results or directions to a rink, this is the place to visit. We'll do our best to keep you informed and hope you come back often. Visitors to Date:
CLUB PROFILE
The Glacier Ice Hockey Club, belonging to the Delaware Valley Hockey League and also the Atlantic Hockey League, was proudly established in 1978 and during its inaugural year had 6 teams. Due in large part to the continuous commitment of volunteers who coach, manage and support Glacier teams, our membership has grown tremendously. During the 2001-2002 season, the Glacier organization supported more than 1,000 travel and in-house hockey team participants.
CONTACT INFORMATION President
Pete Pietrangelo
Phone Fax Address
Face-Off Circle Twin Rinks 1185 York Road, Warminster PA 18974
Email
General Information: ppietrangelo@glaciershockey.org
Webmaster: admin@glaciershockey.org

83. Alaskan Postcards
Scenery, glaciers, mountains, bears, planes, Eskimo dogs, and ice art.
http://www.fairbanksgoldendays.com/cgi-bin/postcards/postcard.pl
Check out our Banner Special
Alaskan Postcards
Step 1: Choose A Category Below
Alaska
AlaskanIceArt

84. Practice Questions: Glaciers And Glaciation
glaciers and Glaciation. You will be told if your answer is correct or not andwill be given some comments. Which type of glaciers are the largest?
http://www.usd.edu/esci/exams/glaciers.html
Glaciers and Glaciation
Practice exam questions written by Timothy H. Heaton
Professor of Earth Sciences, University of South Dakota Click the circle by an answer with the mouse, then click on the Submit button to get a response. You will be told if your answer is correct or not and will be given some comments.
  • Which type of glaciers are the largest?
    Alpine glaciers.
    Ice sheets.
    Ice shelves.
    Outlet glaciers.
    Piedmont glaciers.
  • Which type of glaciers occupy mountain valleys?
    Alpine glaciers.
    Ice sheets.
    Ice shelves. Outlet glaciers. Piedmont glaciers.
  • Which type of glaciers occupy the lowland at mountain fronts? Alpine glaciers. Ice sheets. Ice shelves. Outlet glaciers. Piedmont glaciers.
  • Which type of glaciers are sometimes found in confined valleys at the perimeter of ice sheets? Alpine glaciers. Ice sheets. Ice shelves. Outlet glaciers. Piedmont glaciers.
  • Match each erosional process with the type of valley it creates in cross section. Process Valley type Glacial erosion. Stream erosion. U-shaped valleys. V-shaped valleys.
  • Match the features left by glaciation with their definitions.
  • 85. Glaciers: What Types Of Glaciers Are There?
    Types of glaciers. Ice Sheets. They form primarily in polar and subpolarregions, occupying high and relatively flat regions. Mountain glaciers.
    http://www.digistar.mb.ca/minsci/geology/types.htm
    Types of Glaciers
    Ice Sheets
    Found only in Antarctica and Greenland, ice sheets are enormous masses of glacial ice and snow that cover over 50,000 square kilometers. The ice sheet on Antarctica is over 4200 meters thick in some areas, covering nearly all of the land features except the Transantarctic Mountains that poke up above the ice.
    Ice Shelves
    Ice shelves occur when ice sheets extend over the sea, floating on the water. In thickness they range from a few hundred meters to over 1000 meters. Ice shelves surround the entire continent of Antarctica. The largest shelf is the Ross Ice Shelf , covering over 500,000 square kilometers.
    Ice Caps
    Ice caps are miniature ice sheets, covering less than 50,000 square kilometers. They form primarily in polar and sub-polar regions, occupying high and relatively flat regions.
    Mountain Glaciers
    These glaciers develop in high mountainous regions, often flowing out of icefields that span several peaks or even a mountain range. The largest mountain glaciers are found in Arctic Canada, Alaska, the Andes in South America, the Himalayas in Asia, and on Antarctica. The Chickamin Glacier in British Columbia, Canada, is a typical mountain glacier. Several glaciers flow into it, and the landscape is nearly covered with ice and snow.(R.M. Wilson photograph, 1924, DC-A for Glaciology, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado.)

    86. Gisli Sigurdsson, Painter In Iceland
    This artists from Iceland has been painting for 50 years and his painting has gone through various stages in this 50 years period. Inspired by magnificent mountains, glaciers and lava, he has began painting landscapes.
    http://www.randburg.com/is/gisli.html
    Search Randburg - Search Iceland
    Icelandic

    Gisli Sigurdsson
    Gardaflot 25
    IS-210 Gardabaer
    Iceland
    Tel. + 354 565 7855
    Fax + 354 565 9325
    E-mail

    GISLI SIGURÐSSON
    Painter in Iceland Gísli Sigurðsson was born 1930 on a farm near Geysir. He has been painting for 50 years and his painting has gone through various stages in this 50 years period. Inspired first by a magnificent landscape of mountains, glaciers and lava, he began painting landscapes. But shortly after 1950 the thrust of modernism was very common among artists, and Gísli as well as a number of other painters in Iceland took up more or less abstract painting. Still under influence of Icelandic nature, the source of the abstract pictures was found in the landscape. After 1970 Gísli turned away from abstractions and began painting in the figurative way again, now mainly people. This was a narrative period, the motives from old sagas and folklore. That developed by the years into more and more fantasy-painting and the source was mainly poetry. He even held one big exhibition at the Kjarvalsstaðir museum in 1982 where all the paintings derived from poetry. This period was extended to 1998, when the circle was closed and Gísli Sigurðsson was again inspired by the landscape, mainly the landscape of high altitude and wilderness in Iceland, which has a very special beauty. He has been working on this theme since, sometimes in quite a figurative way, though always somewhat stylized. The motive can a panorama, but it can as well be something very small and close; something you see in this nature if you look down by your feet. And if you are not familiar with that kind of nature, some of the pictures might seem to be abstract.

    87. BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Bolivian Glaciers Shrinking Fast
    Andrew Enever climbs the Bolivian Andes to see the impact on glaciersof rising temperatures and reduced precipitation. Tropical glaciers.
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/2559633.stm
    CATEGORIES TV RADIO COMMUNICATE ... INDEX SEARCH
    You are in: Science/Nature News Front Page World UK ... Programmes SERVICES Daily E-mail News Ticker Mobile/PDAs Text Only ... Help EDITIONS Change to World Tuesday, 10 December, 2002, 09:58 GMT Bolivian glaciers shrinking fast
    Huayna Potosi: The cities below depend on the meltwaters
    By Andrew Enever
    BBC News Online, on the Cordillera Real mountain range, Bolivia Glaciers in the Bolivian Andes are shrinking at an alarming rate, say scientists. The bare rock around the glacier works as an oven, speeding the melting
    Dr Robert Gallaire
    Data collected from tropical ice fields near the world's highest capital, La Paz, show mass loss in the 1990s at rates 10 times greater than previous decades. If rising temperatures and low precipitation continue, many smaller glaciers will vanish in a decade, the researchers believe. Further ahead, the consequence could be water and power shortages for millions of Bolivians. Dangerous work Alvaro Soruco led the way across the Zongo glacier, cautiously poking the ground before him in search of deadly fissures that plummet deep into the dark heart of this slowly moving mass of ice.

    88. STONVODKA
    A premium 80 proof vodka mixed or cooked with water from wells fed from ancient glaciers.
    http://www.stonvodka.com

    89. Geological Field Trips: Grand Canyon And Glaciers
    Lesson Plan 2 glaciers. Objective Partner's Name _. VirtualField Trip on the Internet to Explore glaciers. Previous Knowledge
    http://www-sci.lib.uci.edu/SEP/CTS/Canyon.html
    Geological Field Trips:
    Lesson Plan #1: Virtual Field Trip to the Grand Canyon
    Lesson Plan #2: Glaciers
    Prepared by:
    Patti Zvanut, ABC Unified School District, Cerritos, CA USA URL: http://www.can-do.com/lessons97/Canyon.html
    URL: http://www-sci.lib.uci.edu/SEP/CTS/Canyon.html
    More Internet Science Web Quests and Lesson Plans at These Locations:
    1997 Lessons: http://www-sci.lib.uci.edu/SEP/CTS/index.html
    Mirror Site: http://www.can-do.com/uci/lessons97/index.html 1998 Lessons: http://www-sci.lib.uci.edu/SEP/CTS98/index.html
    Mirror Site: http://www.can-do.com/uci/lessons98/index.html
    Lesson Plan #1: Virtual Field Trip to the Grand Canyon
    Objective:
    Students will utilize the Internet to take a "virtual field trip" to the Grand Canyon to discover how it was formed, where all the rocks came from, and when it all happened. WWW Resource Address:
    http://www.kaibab.org/geology/gc_geol.htm
    Time Required:
    Two forty-five minute periods in the computer lab. Suggested Grade Level:
    Grades 4-8 Grouping:
    Students will work in groups of two on a computer that has access to the Internet. Enrichment: Students may make a PowerPoint or Hyperstudio presentation on the topic or related topics and present it to the class. Some students may wish to go to the Grand Canyon and a make a photographic or video account of their expedition.

    90. Centre For Glaciology
    Research focus is on glaciology and glacial geology. Staff expertise and research areas include relation between glaciers and climate and interactions between glaciers and the marine environment.
    http://www.aber.ac.uk/~glawww/

    91. Icebergs And Glaciers TOC
    Ms HosMcGrane's Grade 6 Social Studies Class. Report on Icebergs andglaciers by Natalie Gabriella The Titanic. Icebergs and glaciers
    http://www.internet-at-work.com/hos_mcgrane/ocean/ocontent.html
    Grade 6 Projects Grade 5 Projects Ms Hos-McGrane's Grade 6
    Social Studies Class Report on "Icebergs and Glaciers"
    The Ocean Project
    In the first quarter of Grade 6 students study the topic of water. In Social Studies we look at the ocean crisis, overfishing, pollution, the world's water and so on, and at the same time in Science we do experiments with water. In 1996, for the first time, students also had four periods of week of Information Technology, where they were taught information literacy and research skills as well as computer literacy. Students spent some time in the classroom, some time in the library and some time in the computer lab. Our first major research topic was entitled The Ocean Project . Students had to choose a topic to do with water, and had to look at the topic from both a science and social studies point of view. Here is a report on Icebergs and Glaciers . produced by two of the students.
    Includes a report on the

    sinking of the Titanic
    Icebergs and Glaciers
    What is an iceberg?

    92. Www.snowmobile.cc
    Alaskan snowmobile tours in the most spectacular region of Alaska. Wildlife, glaciers, and powder.
    http://www.snowmobile.cc/

    93. Glaciers
    Antarctica. glaciers, don't just stay in one place all the time,even though they're frozen solid. is. How are glaciers formed?
    http://www.internet-at-work.com/hos_mcgrane/ocean/oglacier.html
    [Ocean Menu] [Icebergs] Glaciers What is a glacier? All a glacier really is, is a whole lot of snow. Like all mountains have snow on them? No, a glacier isn't the mountain after it has snowed, but after the snow has frozen. A glacier can can be enormous up to 440 miles long. In fact that is the largest glacier on earth. It's called the Lambert glacier and is located in Antarctica. Glaciers, don't just stay in one place all the time, even though they're frozen solid. They don't exactly fly about, but nevertheless they do move. The fastest moving glacier is called Jakobshavn and it moves 62 feet in a day. It doesn't sound like a lot, though it really is, because the only way they can move is by sliding down a thin layer of water that is between the ice and the mountain, or they 'creep' which is when the top layer of ice moves to the bottom eventually making a frozen river sort of thing all the way down the mountain. A glacier can be a lot more complicated then that, yet this is, in basic, what it really is.
    How are glaciers formed?

    94. Welcome To World Glacier Monitoring Service
    Source of information on glaciers and their fluctuations worldwide. World Glacier Inventory contains data on the spatial distribution of glaciers. Fluctuations of glaciers and Mass Balance Bulletin document changes over time (changes in mass, volume, area and length of glaciers).
    http://www.geo.unizh.ch/wgms/

    95. Geological Field Trips: Grand Canyon And Glaciers
    *****. Lesson Plan 2 glaciers. Objective VirtualField Trip on the Internet to Explore glaciers. Previous Knowledge
    http://can-do.com/uci/lessons98/Canyon.html
    Geological Field Trips:
    Lesson Plan #1: Virtual Field Trip to the Grand Canyon
    Lesson Plan #2: Glaciers
    Prepared by:
    Patti Zvanut, ABC Unified School District, Cerritos, CA USA URL: http://www.can-do.com/lessons98/Canyon.html More Internet Science Web Quests and Lesson Plans at These Locations: 1997 Lessons: http://www.can-do.com/uci/lessons97/index.html 1998 Lessons http://www.can-do.com/uci/lessons98/index.html 1999 Lessons http://www.can-do.com/uci/lessons99/index.html
    Lesson Plan #1: Virtual Field Trip to the Grand Canyon
    Objective:
    Students will utilize the Internet to take a "virtual field trip" to the Grand Canyon to discover how it was formed, where all the rocks came from, and when it all happened. WWW Resource Address:
    http://www.kaibab.org/geology/gc_geol.htm
    Time Required:
    Two forty-five minute periods in the computer lab. Suggested Grade Level:
    Grades 4-8 Grouping:
    Students will work in groups of two on a computer that has access to the Internet. Enrichment:
    Students may make a PowerPoint or Hyperstudio presentation on the topic or related topics and present it to the class. Some students may wish to go to the Grand Canyon and a make a photographic or video account of their expedition.

    96. Vinschgau Val Venosta Südtirol Suedtirol Alto Adige Southtyrol
    Tourist information for this valley overlooking glaciers and lakes. Photographs, map and information on resorts, hotel search, restaurants, attractions, events, weather.
    http://www.vinschgau.org/eng.html
    Diese Web-Seite verwendet Frames. Frames werden von Ihrem Browser aber nicht unterstützt. Vinschgau - in the horizont the liberty Info Vinschgau Info Südtirol It's no valley like the others. You have a free view over the gigantic glaciers, over the glittering lakes, over the soft meadows going to the south. A grand scenery, which wants to be discovered. With exciting contrasts, also mediterranen climate, where the wine and the fruits grow. Each of the lovely vacation stations is a little world for itself. Natural, nice, strong and always extraordinary. Generally Generally Vacation stations Vacation stations ... Webmaster: I.C. Werbeagentur

    97. Glaciers And Ice Sheets
    glaciers and Ice Sheets. Ice sheets and glaciers form the largest componentof perennial ice on Earth. Types of glaciers. Ice Sheets. Greenland.
    http://www.solcomhouse.com/icecap.htm
    THE POWER FOR THE PEOPLE Aids Air Traffic Alaska Alaska Pipeline ... Wind Power Glaciers and Ice Sheets Ice sheets and glaciers form the largest component of perennial ice on Earth. Over 75% of the world's fresh water is presently locked up in these frozen reservoirs. A Glacier is any large mass of perennial ice that originates on land by the recrystallization of snow or other forms of solid precipitation and that shows evidence of past or present flow. A glacier occupying an extensive tract of relatively level land and exhibiting flow from the center outward is commonly called an ice sheet. Glaciers form when snow accumulates on a patch of land over tens to hundreds of years. The snow eventually becomes so thick that it collapses under its own weight and forms dense glacial ice. When enough of the ice is compacted together it succumbs to gravity and begins to flow downhill or spread out across flat lands. What makes glaciers unique is their ability to move. Due to sheer mass, glaciers flow like very slow rivers. More than 90 percent of the 33 million cubic kilometers of glacier ice in the world is locked up in the gigantic Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets.

    98. Global Land Ice Measurements From Space (GLIMS)
    U.S.G.S. research project using the world's glaciers to monitor climate change.
    http://wwwflag.wr.usgs.gov/GLIMS/glimshome.html
    Global Land Ice Measurements from Space (GLIMS)
    Using the World's Glaciers to Monitor Climate Change
    Project Overview
    Japanese version GLIMS (Global Land Ice Measurements from Space) is a project designed to monitor the world's glaciers primarily using data from the ASTER (Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and reflection Radiometer) instrument aboard the EOS Terra spacecraft, launched in December, 1999. "Glim" is an archaic Scottish term that means, "a passing look; a glimpse; as much as is seen at a glance." In a future historical perspective, we may well look back on GLIMS and other late-20th Century remote-sensing of Earth's glaciers as a glim of a passing or changing phenomenon. We are continuing to build the infrastructure for GLIMS:
    • a set of software tools that we can apply to the tracking of glaciers'
      • areal extent
      • location of snow line at the end of the melt season
      • velocity field
      • location of terminus
    • a network of centers around the world that will monitor the glaciers in their regions
    • the database infrastructure capable of storing and manipulating approximately 80 gigabytes of additional data per year.

    99. Glaciers
    glaciers. This site is under construction. Have unlinked! Please feel freeto let us know what you think at the email link below. glaciers.
    http://wrgis.wr.usgs.gov/docs/parks/glacier/glacier.html
    Glaciers
    This site is under construction. Have a look around, but be aware that many pages are incomplete and unlinked! Please feel free to let us know what you think at the email link below.
    Glaciers
    Site index The birth of a glacier
    What makes a glacier? A glacier carves a U-shaped valley
    Illustrated explanations show how a glacier changes a meandering, V-shaped stream valley into a relatively straight, U-shaped valley in 4 steps. Carving a cirque at the head of an alpine glacier
    Illustrated explanations shows the development of a cirque and associated glacial features. Features of a valley glacier
    A slice through a glacier

    Illustration shows where snow accumualtes, where it melts and more. Image bank (zillions of megabytes!!!) New glacier terms in glossary firn
    ablation
    annual snowline
    crevasse
    glacial trough / U-shaped valley
    hanging valley moraine terminal moraine cirque bergschrund headwall tarn / cirque lake horn col arete glacial polish glacial striations USE YOUR BACK BUTTON TO RETURN TO THE PREVIOUS PAGE USGS Geology in the Parks home NPS Park Geology Tour home Privacy statement This site is a cooperative project of the US Geological Survey Western Earth Surface Processes Team and the National Park Service Please share your comments and suggestions with us!

    100. Navarino Expediciones - Fly Fishing, Sailing To Glaciers, City Tour Punta Arenas
    The chilean Patagonia a fascinating region, set in a magnificent landscape, mountains, glaciers, forests.
    http://www.navarinoexpediciones.com/
    Mare Australis
    (NUEVO / NEW)
    *Desde Noviembre 2002 Navarino expediciones ofrece transporte privado Aeropuerto / Hotel / Muelle de Embarque para todos nuestros pasajeros del Mare Australis que realizen sus reservas con nuestra agencia. navarino.expediciones@entelchile.net Mare Australis is the new expedition cruise of Australis Cruises of Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego.
    *Since, November 2002.
    Navarino Expediciones offer you private transportation from the airport (hotel) Boarding Harbor, for all the passengers who book writh our travel
    agency. Contact Us : navarino.expediciones@entelchile.net
    Let us introduce you to "The chilean Patagonia" a fascinating region, set in a magnificent landscape, mountains, glaciers, forests, flora and fauna.
    PROGRAMME / OUR SERVICE:
  • Fly Fishing Sailing to Balmaceda and Serrano Glaciers Sailing to the channels City Tour Punta Arenas
  • As DMC (Destination Manager Company) we arrange your trip into the chilean Patagonia according to your requirements.

    Ask for your LODGING in the Patagonia.

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