Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Kneel for some English information about hail and glaciers ~

Kneel for some English information about hail and glaciers ~

Glacier:

A slowly moving block of ice.

wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn

Glacier is a huge and persistent glacier, which is formed on land and moves under the action of gravity. Glaciers are formed by years of accumulated ice in mountainous areas or slopes. The edge of the glacier is where the glacier has recently melted. There are two main types of glaciers: alpine glaciers, which are found in mountainous terrain; Continental glaciers, related to the ice age, can cover a large area of the continent. ...

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glacier

Ray Lloyd is a professional wrestler and is famous for his glaciers in the World Wrestling Championships.

En.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glacier_ (Wrestler)

A large piece of ice formed on land by the compaction and recrystallization of snow moves downhill or outward very slowly due to its own weight.

www.bioquaticsupply.com/html/lkword_g.htm

The land ice body composed of recrystallization snow accumulated on the ground slowly moves downhill.

www.srh.weather.gov/srh/jetstream/append/glossary_g.htm

A large piece of ice (at least.1km 2 ice) moving due to the gravity of the earth, which is the result of little melting of snow.

www.tsgc.utexas.edu/stars/metgloss.html

Glacier is a slow-moving river of ice and snow.

www.enchantedlearning.com/explorers/glossary.shtml

Huge ice cubes that move slowly along slopes or valleys or spread outward on the surface.

www.climatechangenorth.ca/H 1_Glossary.html

A large piece of ice formed by compressed snow moves slowly under its own weight. Where glaciers exist, after a period of time, snow still exists after the end of summer and accumulates year after year.

www.ngdc.noaa.gov/seg/hazard/stratoguide/glossary.html

Glaciers are accumulations of snow, ice, air pockets, water and rock fragments. They can fill valleys or entire continents (such as Antarctica). They have enough mass to flow on a piece of land, moving as little as a few feet and as many as thousands of feet every year. Glaciers are all over the world, such as Africa, New Zealand and Chile.

www.mnh.si.edu/arctic/html/resources_glossary.html

A large piece of ice and snow formed in an area where the snowfall is constantly exceeding the melting snow.

www.ifdn.com/teacher/glossary.htm

Any ice sheet or ice flow from land. It may be active or stagnant.

www . global security . org/military/library/policy/army/FM/3 1-7 1/glass . htm

A chunk of ice piled up by falling snow that flows like a river.

www . ms nucleus . org/membership/html/k-6/RC/dictionary/RC dict . html

A large piece of ice with a clear lateral boundary moves downhill because of its mass, as in Alaska.

www.dep.state.fl.us/geology/geologictopics/glossary.htm

The accumulation of ice from the atmosphere, usually moving slowly on land for a long time.

Www.grid.unep.ch/product/publication/freshwater _ Europe/glos.php.

A large piece of land ice, formed by further recrystallization of snow, flows continuously from high altitude to low altitude. This term covers all ice accumulations from vast continental glaciers to tiny snowdrift glaciers. Almost all glaciers are classified according to their related topographic features, such as highland glaciers, plateau glaciers, foothills glaciers, valley glaciers and bucket glaciers. ...

amsglossary.allenpress.com/glossary/browse

Thick ice cubes formed by compacted snow when more snow is accumulated than melted every year.

interactive 2 . USGS . gov/learning web/text only/teachers/volcanoes _ guide _ glossary . htm

A large amount of ice and snow moving along the earth's surface.

www . mdk 12 . org/instruction/course/science/glossary . shtml

Most of the ice bodies composed of recrystallized snow show signs of slipping due to their own weight.

www . sd5 . k 12 . mt . us/glaciereft/geogloss . htm

Moving ice bodies are usually at least 100 feet thick, so the ice crystals at the bottom will be deformed to affect the movement.

www.tc.umn.edu/~smith2 13/Glossary%20GP.htm

It is an ice body, showing ice streamline, cracks and motion evidence reported by the latest geological evidence. Glaciers exist where there is still snow after summer.

www . UX 1 . EIU . edu/~ cfjps/ 1300/glacial terms . html

It is displayed on the map with white background (ice) and blue contour lines. One glacier is marked in red, but six other glaciers or some glaciers also appear on this map. These are all examples of circular glaciers.

Www. uwsp. edu/geo/ faculty/lemke/alpine _ glare _ glossary/more _ examples/mt _ abbot _ ca.html.

A slow-moving mass of ice formed by accumulated snowfall.

www . doc . IC . AC . uk/~ kpt/terra quest/va/guidance/glossary/glossary . html

Due to the compaction and recrystallization of snow, large chunks of ice are at least partially formed on the land. Due to the pressure of its own weight, these ice move slowly along the slope or in all directions and remain year after year. The term "glacier" is usually (but not completely) limited to ice bodies confined by valleys. Continental-scale ice bodies are often called "ice sheets".

www.abheritage.ca/abnature/glossary.htm

Ice and compacted snow. Glaciers are formed because the temperature is too low to melt the snow. Snow is compacted, and finally snow crystals become granular ice crystals, which is called snow. As the snow accumulated, it turned into solid ice. These changes will take years to complete. There are two types of glaciers: alpine glaciers (formed on hillsides) or ice glaciers (formed on flat land). ...

www . education oasis . com/curriculum/Social _ Studies/geo/geography _ terms . htm

A large piece of ice and snow that moves very slowly (a few inches a year); Can scrape off and move a lot of soil.

www.wheatonparkdistrict.com/recreation/fourth/glossary.html

Ice cubes with clear lateral boundaries move in a clear direction, which comes from the pressure compaction of snow.

www . lpi . usra . edu/publications/slide sets/stones/glossary . shtml

A large piece of ice that persists all year round slowly moves down in the liquid under its own weight. Glaciers are formed in areas where snow has no chance to melt in winter, and continuous snowfall accumulates and compresses into ice.

www.world-waterfalls.com/glossary.php

Hail:

Cheer: praise loudly; "Critics praised the young pianist as the new Rubinstein."

Be a native of; "She's from Kalamazoo."

Appeal; "Call a taxi"

Greet warmly or pleasantly.

When there is a strong updraft, the precipitation of ice particles

Warm greetings

Precipitate like small ice particles; "It rained for an hour."

wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn

Hail is a kind of graupel (a form of precipitation), which consists of balls or irregular ice cubes. This happens when supercooled water droplets in storm clouds (which remain liquid even though they are below freezing point 0 C/32 F) gather around some solid objects, such as dust particles or hail that has already formed. Then water freezes around the object. ...

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hail

Showers in the form of irregular balls or ice hockey falling from cumulonimbus clouds with a diameter of more than 5 mm.

www . geog . UBC . ca/courses/g 102/Resources/g 102 glossary . html

Precipitation consisting of chunks of ice formed on the top of cumulonimbus clouds will fall when they become too heavy to be held by the updraft of clouds.

www.flowmeterdirectory.com/meteorology_terms.html

Precipitation in the form of transparent or partially opaque spherical or irregular concentric ice cubes. Hail is usually defined as 5 mm or more in diameter, which is produced by thunderstorms.

www.weca.org/nws-terms.html

Call another ship. Port-a safe and protected place for berthing and loading. Hatch-an opening in a deck that provides access to the space below. Head-the word has many uses in rowing, and the most important thing for people on board is the "toilet" heading-the compass direction that the ship points at any given moment. Waves from the direction of the ship. Rudder-the position of the steering wheel. ...

www.searay.com/boating_glossary.asp

Precipitation in the form of hard ice pellets falling from cumulus clouds is usually associated with thunderstorms.

www.aeroplanemonthly.com/glossary/glossary_H.htm

Precipitation consisting of spherical or irregular ice cubes with a diameter of 5 to 50 mm.

www.telemet.com/weather_gloss_h.htm

Hard ice falling from the clouds.

www.bbc.co.uk/weather/weatherwise/glossary/h.shtml

Precipitation in the form of spherical or irregular ice is always produced by convective clouds, almost always cumulonimbus clouds. A single unit of hail is called hail. Traditionally, hail has a diameter of 5 mm or more, while smaller particles from similar sources, formerly known as small hail, can be classified as ice particles or snow particles. ...

amsglossary.allenpress.com/glossary/browse

Spherical or massive precipitation caused by thunderstorms. Strong storms with strong updraft are most likely to produce heavy hail.

www.srh.noaa.gov/ffc/html/spotglos.shtml

Precipitation in the form of ice in thunderstorms.

www.cookcountysheriff.com/ema/glossary.html

A form of frozen precipitation in which water droplets still freeze into ice when they reach the ground. A single drop of water or hail varies in size from a grain of sand to a big pebble.

www.naturalhazards.org/glossary/

A kind of freezing precipitation, which is formed when raindrops are repeatedly thrown high into the atmosphere by a strong updraft. Every time they rise and fall, new ice layers are added until they are finally heavy enough to fall to the ground. Hail accompanied by intense thunderstorm is usually a summer phenomenon.

wilstar.com/skywatch_glossary.htm

The size of ice hockey ranges from small peas to those larger than oranges.

australiasevereweather.com/photography/define2.htm

Precipitation particles of ice of millimeters or larger are formed by the growth of ice crystals and the rapid freezing of supercooled water droplets.

www . advanced forecasting . com/weather education/weather glossary . html

Call another ship.

www.lib.mq.edu.au/all/journeys/ships/glossary.html

Sometimes ice cubes form in high clouds.

www.rcn27.dial.pipex.com/cloudsrus/glossary.html

Precipitation in the form of nearly spherical or jagged ice; Usually characterized by concentric internal stratification. Hail is related to thunderstorm cell, and thunderstorm cell has strong updraft and relatively large water content.

www.ametsoc.org/amsedu/WES/glossary.html

Precipitation in the form of hard ice or hard snow particles.

www . wef . org/public info/news room/waste water _ glossary k-2 . jhtml

Precipitation in the form of round or irregularly shaped ice cubes.

weather.ncbuy.com/glossary.html

Ice hockey formed by rain thrown back into thunderstorm clouds by airflow is surrounded by a layer of ice. Hail can return to the clouds many times, and each time it is covered with another layer of ice.

library.thinkquest.org/3805/glossary/gloss.htm

Opaque ice hockey is almost always spherical. Hail occurs in all provinces, but the most frequent ones are Saskatchewan and Alberta, where some areas can have as many as 10 storms a year.

members . tripod . com/~ Mitchell brown/almanac/weather _ glossary . html

The rain has frozen many times in the process of falling to the ground, forming a massive ice hockey.

weathereye.kgan.com/cadet/disaster/glossary.html

Trying to contact another ship or coast by voice or radio.

www.terrax.org/sailing/glossary/gh.aspx

It is the precipitation of small balls or ice cubes (hail) with a diameter of 5 to 50 mm (1/2 to 2 inches) or sometimes larger, which fall alone or merge into irregular lumps. Hail is almost entirely composed of transparent ice or a series of transparent ice at least 1 mm (1/25 inches). ), alternating with translucent layers. Hail is usually observed during strong thunderstorms.

www.mid-c.com/manmar/Definiti.htm

Ice hockey growing in the updraft of thunderstorm.

www.carlwozniak.com/clouds/glossary.html