File name : | 151 - Bill Eichenlaub |
File size : | 686933 bytes |
File date : | 2015:01:17 21:50:22 |
Camera make : | NIKON CORPORATION |
Camera model : | NIKON D300 |
Date/Time : | 2009:06:22 10:58:08 |
Resolution : | 1807 x 1200 |
Flash used : | No |
Focal length : | 18.0mm (35mm equivalent: 27mm) |
Exposure tim : | 0.0040 s (1/250) |
Aperture : | f/8.0 |
ISO equiv. : | 200 |
Exposure bia : | -0.33 |
Whitebalance : | Auto |
Metering Mod : | pattern |
Exposure : | program (auto) |
JPEG Quality : | 91 |
======= IPTC dat : | ======= |
City : | %G |
Record vers. : | 4 |
Keywords : | Glaciers |
DateCreated : | 20090622 |
Time Created : | 105808-0800 |
Byline : | Bill Eichenlaub |
Headline : | Bill_Eichenlaub |
Credit : | Bill Eichenlaub |
(C)Notice : | Copyright Bill Eichenlaub |
Caption : | The cone shaped mounds are called glacier cones or debris cones. They are mostly ice with a thin veneer of gravel and sand over a cone of ice. How do they form? Imagine putting a shovelful of gravel and sand on a flat glacier surface. Over time as the glacier surface melts, the sand and gravel insulate the ice just a little compared to the gravel-less ice around it. The center of the pile insulates just a little bit more than along the edges of the pile. As the entire surface of the glacier melts, the ice beneath the gravel melts slower and a cone gradually forms with the original pile spread across it. OK, but how does the pile of gravel get there in the first place? Well, check out the next photo... |
|
|
|