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about glaciers
The Franz
Josef and Fox Glaciers of New Zealand's Westland National Park
are remembered by visitors for the extraordinary sights of
glacier ice within the forest zone. From freezing conditions near
the mountain crests the glaciers slowly grind their way
down-valley into warmer temperatures far below the upper limit of
forest. It may seem a contradiction that such glaciers occur in a
temperate climate, and that ice and forest are juxtaposed, but
there are simple reasons.
What is a Glacier?
A
glacier is simply a large body of ice, formed from the snow left
over at the end of summer, which is moving slowly downhill.
Glaciers occur at high elevations, where winter snowfalls exceed
the snow lost from summer melting. Across the accumulation basin (neve)
of a glacier, delicate snow flakes partially melt to form
whitish granular snow (firn). Over several years, as
water seeps in and air is expelled under the accumulating weight
of snow, the granules merge to form bluish glacial ice. Under the
pull of gravity the ice mass actually flows as though it were a
stiff liquid, slowly oozing its way down-valley where it melts
away in warmer temperatures.
Why are there Glaciers on a South Pacific Island?
Above the Franz Josef and Fox glaciers stands a
chain of spectacular peaks over 3000m high including New
Zealand's highest peak, Mt Cook (3754m 12,316ft). This region,
the highest part of the Southern Alps, lies in the path of the
westerly airstream which sweeps in continually from the Tasman
Sea, As moisture laden winds and frequent storm fronts ascend the
mountains, the air cools rapidly causing heavy rain and
snowfalls. Annual precipitation at the coast is a dramatic 3.2
metres (125in) but this rises to an amazing 15 metres (nearly
50ft) on the alpine summits. Huge volumes of snow are dumped on
the upper slopes of the mountains giving rise to the 140 glaciers
which blanket over 200 square kilometres of Westland National
Park. The Franz Josef and Fox glaciers are by far the largest of
these, containing two thirds of the volume of glacial ice in the
park.
Why is there ice in a temperate Rain Forest?
Of the many glaciers along the Main
Divide, only the Franz Josef and Fox glaciers penetrate the lower
forest zones. This
phenomenon is caused by their unique topographic setting, where
an exceptionally broad, high block of land at the heads of the
glaciers feeds huge amounts of snow and ice into two narrow
valleys. The balance of a glacier requires that melting of the
tongue equals accumulation in the neve. The narrow tongue of the
Franz Josef and Fox glaciers must therefore extend a great
distance down-valley so that the zone of melting is large enough
to balance the massive snowfall in the catchment area above.
The movement of a Glacier
On the upper mountain slopes at back of the neve,
snow and ice pull away from the headwalls along a single crevasse
called a bergschrund and then begin to flow slowly downhill. Ice
moves by sliding over the underlying rock on a film of water, and
by plastic flow within the glacier itself. The deeper the ice the
more plastic its behaviour, while the top layer of about 20m
thickness rides along as a brittle crust, splitting and cracking
into deep crevasses where the glacier flows over humps and
hollows and drags against the valley sides. Where steps occur in
the bedrock, intense crevassing may form towering blocks of ice (seracs) which may topple into a chaotic jumble (icefall).
With the
continual addition of snow to the neve, snow and ice move
downward into the glacier, everything on the surface becoming
buried deep within the ice. Further down the glacier at the trunk
(just below the neve) the flow of ice attains its maximum
speed. In the icefalls of the Franz Josef and Fox glaciers rates
of up to 4m per day have been recorded, which are very rapid by
world standards. For example, in 1943 an aircraft crashed on the
Franz Josef Glacier about 4km up from the terminus. Six years
later parts of the wreckage appeared at the glacier front.
Lower down the trunk the rate of flow slows as more and more ice
melts in the warmer conditions. Here ice flows becomes directed
towards the surface to replace ice melted from above. This flow
brings rock debris from within the glacier to the surface, where
it accumulates as moraine. General movement is in the direction
of the banding within the ice. Near the Termius nearly
all the ice has been lost, and most of debris from inside the ice
now lies on the surface. Though the glacier front may be
stationary, the ice near the Main Divide carrying greywacke rock from this area into the schist terrain at the glacier
terminus.
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