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A glacier is a river of ice, mostly on land. It is fed by snowfields in the mountains and flows down a valley, like a very slow moving river, until it meets with the sea or a lake.

An iceberg is a large piece of ice floating in water. It may have broken off a glacier or it may have been part of an ice shelf (a continuous field of ice usually floating on water but not moving).

2006-06-09 23:19:20 · answer #1 · answered by Owlwings 7 · 1 2

Glacier Iceberg

2016-12-15 16:02:05 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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There's a big difference. An iceberg is a massive floating body of ice broken away from a glacier. Only about 10 percent of its mass is above the surface of the water. A glacier is a huge mass of ice slowly flowing over a land mass, formed from compacted snow in an area where snow accumulation exceeds melting and sublimation. I know you didnt ask for this one, but I'm going to say it anyway, if you didn't know what the difference is between those two. A tundra is a treeless area between the icecap and the tree line of Arctic regions, having a permanently frozen subsoil and supporting low-growing vegetation such as lichens, mosses, and stunted shrubs. Robert, you have no right to insult them. Glaciers ARE found at the base of a mountain but it can't flow DOWNWARD, because it's already it the bottom. That quesstion was just just as close to idiocy as theirs, no offenence guys... Few glaciers are found on mountains, unless if you're talking about Mount Everest's Khumbu Glacier. Glaciers are formed at the north & south poles, majority of mass amount of glaciers are there. A mountainous ice range can melt in changing climates, like I said, Everest is a dirrerent story.

2016-04-08 21:02:16 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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RE:
What's the difference between a Glacier and Iceberg?

2015-08-18 16:44:24 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

An Iceberg is the front edge of a Glacier that has broken free from the Glacier and is set adrift in the ocean.
A Glacier is a mass of slow moving ice, ie, a frozen river, flowing very slowly.

2006-06-09 23:22:12 · answer #5 · answered by sonny_too_much 5 · 2 0

A glacier is a frozen river.If it ends by the sea,chunks "calve" off and become icebergs.,so it's all the same water.Not every glacier ends up at the ocean however ,some just peter out on land.

2006-06-09 23:20:21 · answer #6 · answered by hotclaws 5 · 0 1

A glacier is on land and an iceberg is in water.

2006-06-10 00:51:39 · answer #7 · answered by Jean the Bean 1 · 0 1

A glacier is a massive ice floe, on land. When a glacier gets to the sea, large parts break off and become ice bergs, which are large masses of ice floating in the sea. Glaciers are ice on land. Ice bergs are ice floating in the sea.

2006-06-09 23:21:33 · answer #8 · answered by regerugged 7 · 0 1

Glaciers are moving "rivers" of ice that move down mountainsides.

Icebergs are pieces of glaciers that break off (calve) at a seacoast and float in the ocean.

Look at these pics:

http://www.jimwegryn.com/Photos/Alaskan%20glacier.jpg

http://www.twacking.ca/ecards/K_Bruce-iceberg.jpg

http://www.tobinphoto.com/images/photos/calving-glacier.jpg

2006-06-09 23:19:36 · answer #9 · answered by zen 7 · 0 1

that's an interesting question and I hope you'll get valuable answers

2016-08-22 23:33:00 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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