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Old 03-10-2006, 07:40 AM   #1 (permalink)
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Wisconsin Glaciation & Definitions

Wisconsin Glaciation Terms

Basin: geographically a low area of land

Bedrock: rock base underlying the soil layers

Bog: an decompression area of poorly drainage that receives its precipitation solely by atmospheric rainwater and snow. *In Wisconsin usually found in the Kettle Moraine areas of the state from the recent glaciation period.

Collapsed till: when ice chunks were covered with till their eventual
melting created rolling landscape areas

Debris: soil and rock carried by glaciers

Driftless Area: The unglaciated southwest REGION of Wisconsin

Drumlins: Oval or elongated hills formed between 5 and 20 miles from
the edges of glacial lobes, aligned in the direction of ice movement.

end moraine: the furthest advance of the glacier recognized by a line of boulders & gravel deposited by the receding glaciers.

Erratics: boulders that were transported from their point of origin

eskers: An above ground, sinuous riverlike formation of debris formed
from a glacial stream flowing over frozen ground under a glacier.

Fissures: deep cracks which develop in glacial ice created from pressure melting & movement of ice.

drift: deposited surface debris (clay, silt, sand, pebbles, cobbles, boulders)

Glacial “Lake Wisconsin”: Huge glacial lake formed near Prairie du Sac
-formed “sand counties

Green Bay Lobe – the tongue of the glacier that carved out Green Bay,
Lake Winnebago and the Horicon Marsh.

Ice Age: Geologic age when ice sheets covered 30% of land.

Ice cap: Continental Glaciers: 2 miles deep in central Canada; 400 feet deep over Wisconsin

Ice sheet: another name for the continental glaciers.

Interglacial: geologic time between glacial ice sheets

kames: conical hills, formed when meltwater moves through fissures in
the ice and create a cone shape deposit of debris.

kettles: potlike landforms made when huge chunks of ice broke off and was buried in till by the receding glaciers, when melted it formed a feature known as a “kettle.”

Kettle Moraine Area: Rocky debris region when Green Bay Lobe
collided with the Lake Michigan Lobe.

Lake Algonquin: Glacial Lake encompased Lakes Huron, Michigan,
Superior, Winnipeg, Lake of the Woods, and part of Manitoba.

Lake Michigan Lobe: tongue created Lakes Superior & Michigan

Lobe: the portion of glacial ice also known as a “tongue”

Moraines: ridges made up of till. Usually much longer than wide.

Outwash: debris carried by meltwater.

recessional moraine: a line of boulders and gravel deposited when the
glaciers were not moving or receding.

Rebound: the phenomenon whereby the glacially depressed land is
uplifting to its preglacial level.

Till: rock debris deposited directly by moving or melting ice, with no
meltwater flow, or redeposition, involved. UNSORTED/UNSTRATIFIED, angular MATERIAL (Erratics)


Topography: the lay of the land and land formations. (landscapes!)

Two Creeks Buried Forest: Forest buried by advance of last ice age.

Tundra: earth that is always frozen in permafrost


Wisconsin Glacier: The last glacial advance in northern
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Old 03-11-2006, 09:24 AM   #2 (permalink)
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Lots of ice...

Lots of ice…

Lets travel back through time…in a world once covered with ice 2 miles thick. It was a place totally different from today’s climate. In 2002, 20th Century Fox gave the viewers a whole new outlook to this period in Earths natural history known as the Pleistocene in the animated movie called “Ice Age”. This is an excellent movie to give us perspectives of a world covered by colossal ice shelves, volcanoes, nomadic primitive man and of course the migration of Pleistocene mammals. Now I supposed you’re wondering why I bring up this movie as a introduction. The answer is it’s not just funny but also informative.

Some 2 million years ago our climate cooled to the point that we fell into perminate interglacial period that we have dubbed The Ice Age. These change of events had a profound impact on our landscape. A lot of folks don’t realize Wisconsin is one of the best places to see and photograph glacial topography in the world thanks to the Pleistocene Epoch. Then 10-12,000 years ago after the last ice shelves named after our state scoured our landscape the climate warmed, glaciers began to retreat or melt back. In their wake, they left an impressive glacial landscape of fascinating topography. Some landforms features you’ll recognize are moraines, drumlins, kames, kettles (remnants are bogs), eskers, outwash plains, erratics, meltwater channels, potholes, driftless (unglaciated) topography, glacial lakebeds and islands, and more.

Today, The Ice Age National Scenic Trail helps preserve this delicate beauty and educate us on our state’s natural history. It leads to places close to our homes; as well as to remote parts of Wisconsin.

In conclusion I would like to end again with a quotation from one of the animals during the “Great Migration” scene of the “Ice Age” Movie.
Quote:
“Well, why don't they call it The Big Chill? Or The Nippy Era? I'm just sayin', how do we know it's an Ice Age? ”?’ The answer comes, “Because of all the ice!

:wink:
http://www.iceagemovie.com/
http://www.iceagetrail.org/
http://www2.nature.nps.gov/geology/parks/icag/index.cfm
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Old 07-15-2007, 07:29 AM   #3 (permalink)
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Baby mammoth found in Russian permafrost

July 11, 2007

Intact, 40,000-year-old body promises unique genetic map

MOSCOW - The discovery of a baby mammoth preserved in the Russian permafrost gives researchers their best chance yet to build a genetic map of a species extinct since the Ice Age, a Russian scientist said on Wednesday.

"It's a lovely little baby mammoth indeed, found in perfect condition," said Alexei Tikhonov, deputy director of the Russian Academy of Science's Zoological Institute, which has been taking care of the mammoth since it was uncovered in May.

"This specimen may provide unique material allowing us to ultimately decipher the genetic makeup of the mammoth," he told Reuters by telephone.

The mammoth, a female who died at the age of six months, was named "Lyuba" after the wife of reindeer breeder and hunter Yuri Khudi who found her in Russia's Arctic Yamalo-Nenetsk region.

She had been lying in the frozen ground for up to 40,000 years, said Tikhonov.

:arrow:
http://www.ocregister.com/ocregister...le_1761311.php


Quote:
:wink: This is wonderful news, we just might be able to bring back the Wooly Mammoth someday! Shes an adorable girl too. Resurrecting the mammoth is still not possible, but has become at least worth thinking about.



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Geography buffs What is the name of the breath-taking Mountain Range in this sibera territory which provides some wonderfully unique & very rare gemstones. Ie: Demantoid Garnet, sapphires, emeralds beryls, chrysoberyls, tourmalines, aquamarines, topaz, amethysts, rockcrystals, and many kinds of jade as well as malachite and marble are cut and polished in the region. GIVE UP YET?



Demantoid Garnet raw form, just how I enjoy my stones!
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Old 07-15-2007, 08:01 AM   #4 (permalink)
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What an interesting story. It is difficult to even think of sometime being 40,000 years old and then be so fully intact the way it is. To be able to touch and work on an animal that actually roamed this earth so long ago would be an awesome experience.

It will be interesting to see what they discover when researching this. If you find any more stories on this please be sure to add it here for us to follow.

Thanks again for a great article.

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Old 10-06-2007, 09:47 AM   #5 (permalink)
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Re: Wisconsin Glaciation & Definitions

Located on the Ice Age Park & Trail Foundation

I know some are repeated from my above glossary of terms. But it’s good to refresh our rich glacial history within Wisconsin. By the way the answer to the Russian mountain range is the dubbed Ural.

Barrens: Areas where pine and stunted oaks grow. Barrens made up 12% of the state’s original landscape. Found in prairie-like areas with sandy, infertile soil. Animals that inhabit barrens include whitetail deer, grouse, prairie chicken, redheaded woodpecker and timber wolf.

Bog: A wetland of spongy ground or peat, often with tamaracks and sphagnum moss.

Continental Glaciation: The formation, movement, recession and related effects of colossal, nearly continent-sized ice sheets. Though common during the Pleistocene (or most recent) Ice Age, the only ice sheets that today approach the enormity of those existing during the Ice Age are in Antarctica and Greenland. Continental glaciation sculpted a quarter of the Earth’s landmass and dramatically changed the Earth’s climate, oceans, plants and animals.

Dells/Dalles: A gorge cut by torrents of meltwater released by a melting glacier or draining of glacial lakes. Some dramatic examples: the Dells of the Eau Claire, the Wisconsin Dells and the Dalles of St. Croix.

Dolomite: A rock similar to limestone consisting largely of calcium magnesium carbonate.

Driftless Area: The southwestern quarter of Wisconsin is unglaciated or shows no signs of past glacial activity. It is a landscape deeply cut by ancient streams into narrow, angular valleys and several hundred million years old ridges. The best place along the Trail to see the Driftless Area is Dane County between Mineral Point Rd. and Table Bluff, west of the end moraine.

Drumlin: An elongated, teardrop-shaped hill. These streamlined hills were sculpted in the direction of the glacial ice movement. They often occur in groups known as swarms. Because drumlins generally form miles behind, or up-ice, from an end moraine, they are rare along the Trail. The Farmington Drumlins, in Waupaca County, is the largest swarm of drumlins along the existing segments of the Trail. A small group of drumlins is in Door County between Maplewood and Sturgeon Bay. State Hwy. 60, between Columbus and Hartford, and Interstate Hwy. 94, between Madison and Sussex, cross one of the largest drumlin swarms in the world.

End Moraine: A type of moraine formed at the outer edge of a glacier or glacial lobe where it paused or stopped. Prominent end moraines along the Trail can be witnessed at Prairie Moraine County Park in Dane County, Devil's Lake State Park in Sauk County and the range of hills north and east of Antigo in Langlade County.

Erratics: Boulders carried long distances by the glaciers and deposited when the glacier melted. They tend to be smooth and rounded. Erratics can be found along the entire Trail, except where it traverses parts of the Driftless Area. Large, famous erratics along the Trail are in Walworth, Waupaca and Langlade counties.

Esker: A sinuous rounded ridge of sand and gravel deposited by the streams that flowed through tunnels at the base of the glacier. The Parnell Esker in the Northern Unit of the Kettle Moraine State Forest is the most notable example along the Trail. Other excellent eskers are in Polk and Taylor counties.

Extinct Glacial Lake: A glacial lake that drained, often catastrophically, when a glacier or glacial lobe melted back. Extinct Glacial Lake Wisconsin’s lakebed remains visible in Adams and Juneau counties. Much of the Fox Valley was for a time under Glacial Lake Oshkosh.

Fen: An area of low, flat marshy land where decomposing plants accumulate, forming peat.

Ford: A shallow place in a river or stream where one can cross by wading.

Hummocky: Hilly, knob-and-kettle topography.

Ice Sheet: A large, continental glacier that is not confined by underlying topography. The northeastern quarter of North America was covered over a dozen times by the Laurentide Ice Sheet during the Ice Age, between 10,000 and 2.5 million years ago. Today, ice sheets are found only in polar regions such as Greenland and Antarctica.

Ice-Walled-Lake Plains: Mesa-like hills that were once lakes on a melting glacier. Streams flowing on the glacier deposited loads of sediment into these lakes. When the surrounding glacier had completely melted, the lake bottoms became the hilltops. Ice-walled-lake plains are showcased at the Chippewa Moraine National Scientific Reserve in Chippewa County.

Kame: A conical hill. Composed primarily of water-rounded sand and cobbles, these deposits were left by streams that flowed downward through shafts in the glacial ice. The Kettle Moraine contains the largest and most important kame fields in the world, particularly between Dundee and the Parnell Tower, near Slinger and at Holy Hill. Kames are intriguing because of their shape and the way they were formed, not because of their size.

Kettle: A surface depression formed by large, detached blocks of melting ice that were buried with sand and gravel. As the ice melted, the other material collapsed, leaving a crater-like depression. Some kettles are more than 100 feet deep. Kettles can be found in many places along the Trail.

Kettle Moraine: Also called the Interlobate Moraine, the Kettle Moraine is a series of ridges, 120 miles long and only a few miles wide, in eastern Wisconsin. The combined action and deposits of the Green Bay and Lake Michigan lobes of the continental ice sheet formed the Kettle Moraine. The Kettle Moraine is the birthplace of the Ice Age Trail and the subject of the first published study of interlobate glaciation in 1878.

Lobe: A tongue-like extension of an ice sheet. Six major lobes during the late Wisconsin Glaciation covered portions of Wisconsin. These lobes were the Superior, Chippewa, Wisconsin Valley, Langlade, Green Bay and Lake Michigan lobes. The Des Moines Lobe extended slightly into western Polk County.

Mammoth: An extinct species of elephant with hairy skin and long tusks curving upward that roamed North America, Europe and Asia.

Moraine: A ridge formed by unsorted gravel, sand and boulders carried by the glacier and deposited at the outer edge, or front, of the glacier. Some are only 10 feet high, while others rise 250 to 300 feet. Moraines define the basic route of the Trail, and can be found in many places along it.

Outwash Plain: A sandy plain formed when glacial meltwater streams in front of glaciers spread over a very wide, flat area. The water swept the sand into both glaciated and unglaciated areas. Between Hancock and Plover, Interstate Hwy. 39 crosses part of a vast outwash plain. Another example is the Antigo Flats of Langlade County, visible along the Trail from the Harrison Hills of Lincoln County.

Pitted Outwash: An area of outwash that is dimpled with kettles. These areas were formed by meltwater-carried blocks of ice that were deposited with sand and gravel, and later melted in place, leaving kettles.

Potholes: A smooth bowl carved into bedrock by the grinding action of stones whirling around in a river eddy. Many potholes were formed by torrents of glacial meltwater during the Ice Age. The best place to see these along the Trail is near the western terminus in Interstate State Park. These potholes were formed when the St. Croix River was much deeper than today. Small potholes at Devil's Lake State Park formed before the
Ice Age.

Swale: A hollow or depression at the beginning of a valley that often has wet soils.

Terminal Moraine: A type of end moraine where a glacier or glacial lobe reached its maximum extent and melted back.

Tunnel Channel: Created by a fast moving river under a glacier that carves a valley. After the glacier has melted, the valley often contains a series of lakes. Prominent tunnel channels can be seen along the Trail in the New Hope Segment in Portage County and the Straight River Segment in Polk County.

Wisconsin Glaciation: A period of the Earth’s history at the end of the Pleistocene Ice Age, between 10,000 and 75,000 years ago.
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