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1

SRM-87 t1_j1i5fet wrote

Its cause it is.. Just got stuck half way

12

Terrible_Cut_3336 t1_j1icjvj wrote

It is the flow of water. The frozen flow of water. Ice is still a liquid just with a rather high viscosity.

It flows via internal shear stress (deformation), basal melting resulting in sliding and/or if resting on a soft bed - subglacial deformation.

​

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58

veryangrydoggo t1_j1idndo wrote

Not even stuck. Most of them actually move but at a rate we can't notice by iust looking at them. There are even some of them that scratched the river/ocean floor while moving and startled sonic underwater detectors. I think you can find them on YT

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CombinationAway2762 t1_j1ifuu5 wrote

I consider myself extremely fortunate to have seen this in person. Alaska is something else.

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NewDad907 t1_j1iu57o wrote

looks outside

Yep, that’s from up here in Alaska. Glaciers are frozen highways through the mountains.

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boomsauce22 t1_j1jvgh2 wrote

Harding ice field! That hike was the highlight of my first Alaska trip!

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MentalClarityArts t1_j1lfkad wrote

No, no.. he's got point. None of the other things happening would matter without the downward force to cause the flow. It would just be a block or a puddle if it didn't have the gravity to pull it down.

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I-melted t1_j1lnmo4 wrote

It definitely is the flow of water.

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felixfj007 t1_j1ltvxn wrote

It's always weird to see the name "fjord" on things that are too far from the sea to be fjords.

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ArcticBiologist t1_j1m4g99 wrote

Interesting to see such lush vegetation right next to it. The glaciers I'm used to are usually surrounded by a barren moraine that takes decades or longer to be colonised by plants.

1