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IELTS Reading Practice

Glaciers

A

Besides the earth’s oceans, glacier ice is the largest source of water on earth. A glacier is a massive stream or sheet of ice that moves underneath itself under the influence of gravity. Some glaciers travel down mountains or valleys, while others spread across a large expanse of land. Heavily glaciated regions such as Greenland and Antarctica are called continental glaciers. These two ice sheets encompass more than 95 percent of the earth’s glacial ice. The Greenland ice sheet is almost 10,000 feet thick in some areas, and the weight of this glacier is so heavy that much of the region has been depressed below sea level. Smaller glaciers that occur at higher elevations are called alpine or valley glaciers. Another way of classifying glaciers is in terms of their internal temperature. In temperate glaciers, the ice within the glacier is near its melting point. Polar glaciers, in contrast, always maintain temperatures far below melting.

B

The majority of the earth’s glaciers are located near the poles, though glaciers exist on all continents, including Africa and Oceania. The reason glaciers are generally formed in high alpine regions is that they require cold temperatures throughout the year. In these areas where there is little opportunity for summer ablation (loss of mass), snow changes to compacted fim and then crystallized ice. During periods in which melting and evaporation exceed the amount of snowfall, glaciers will retreat rather than progress. While glaciers rely heavily on snowfall, other climactic conditions including freezing rain, avalanches, and wind, contribute to their growth. One year of below average precipitation can stunt the growth of a glacier tremendously. With the rare exception of surging glaciers, a common glacier flows about 10 inches per day in the summer and 5 inches per day in the winter. The fastest glacial surge on record occurred in 1953, when the Kutiah Glacier in Pakistan grew more than 12 kilometers in three months.

C

The weight and pressure of ice accumulation causes glacier movement. Glaciers move out from under themselves, via plastic deformation and basal slippage. First, the internal flow of ice crystals begins to spread outward and downward from the thickened snow pack also known as the zone of accumulation. Next, the ice along the ground surface begins to slip in the same direction. Seasonal thawing at the base of the glacier helps to facilitate this slippage. The middle of a glacier moves faster than the sides and bottom because there is no rock to cause friction. The upper part of a glacier rides on the ice below. As a glacier moves it carves out a U-shaped valley similar to a riverbed, but with much steeper walls and a flatter bottom.

D

Besides the extraordinary rivers of ice, glacial erosion creates other unique physical features in the landscape such as horns, fjords, hanging valleys, and cirques. Most of these landforms do not become visible until after a glacier has receded. Many are created by moraines, which occur at the sides and front of a glacier. Moraines are formed when material is picked up along the way and deposited in a new location. When many alpine glaciers occur on the same mountain, these moraines can create a horn. The Matterhorn, in the Swiss Alps is one of the most famous horns. Fjords, which are very common in Norway, are coastal valleys that fill with ocean water during a glacial retreat. Hanging valleys occur when two or more glacial valleys intersect at varying elevations. It is common for waterfalls to connect the higher and lower hanging valleys, such as in Vosemite National Park. A cirque is a large bowlshaped valley that forms at the front of a glacier. Cirques often have a lip on their down slope that is deep enough to hold small lakes when the ice melts away.

E

Glacier movement and shape shifting typically occur over hundreds of years. While presently about 10 percent of the earth’s land is covered with glaciers, it is believed that during the last Ice Age glaciers covered approximately 32 percent of the earth’s surface. In the past century, most glaciers have been retreating rather than flowing forward. It is unknown whether this glacial activity is due to human impact or natural causes, but by studying glacier movement, and comparing climate and agricultural profiles over hundreds of years, glaciologists can begin to understand environmental issues such as global warming.

Questions 1-5

Reading Passage 1 has five paragraphs,Β A-E.Β Choose the most suitable heading for each paragraph from the list of headings below.Write theΒ appropriate numbers (i-viii) on your Answer SheetThere are more headings than paragraphs, so you will not use them all.

1Β Paragraph AΒ 2Β Paragraph BΒ 3Β Paragraph CΒ 4Β Paragraph DΒ 5Β Paragraph EΒ 

Β List of HeadingsiGlacial ContinentsiiFormation and Growth of GlaciersiiiGlacial MovementivGlaciers in the Last Ice AgevGlaciers Through the YearsviTypes of GlaciersviiGlacial Effects on LandscapeviiiGlaciers in National Parks

Questions 6-10

Do the following statements agree with the information in Passage 1 ? in boxesΒ 6-10Β on your Answer Sheet, writeTRUEΒ if the statement is true according to the passage.FALSEΒ if the statement contradicts the passage.NOT GIVENΒ if there is no information about this in the passage.6Β Β Β  Β Glaciers exist only near the north and south poles.7Β Β Β Β Β Glaciers are formed by a combination of snow and other weather conditions.8Β Β Β Β Β Glaciers normally move at a rate of about 5 to 10 inches a day.9Β Β Β  Β All parts of the glacier move at the same speed.10Β Β Β  Β During the last Ice Age, average temperatures were much lower than they are now.

Questions 11-15

Match each definition below with the term it defines.Write the letter of the term,Β A-H, on your Answer SheetΒ There are more terms than definitions, so you will not use them all

Β 

TermsAfjordBalpine glacierChornDpolar glacierEtemperate glacierFhanging valleyGcirqueHsurging glacier11 Β  Β a glacier formed on a mountainΒ 12 Β  Β a glacier with temperatures well below freezingΒ 13 Β  Β a glacier that moves very quicklyΒ 14 Β  Β a glacial valley formed near the oceanΒ 15 Β Β a glacial valley that looks like a bowlΒ 

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