Definitions
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun A lake formed between the margin of a glacier and an encircling rim of land. A glacier-lake may be produced by the advance of an ice-front against the course of natural drainage.
Etymologies
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Examples
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There are faint indications of other terraces in Glen Roy, even at a higher level than the uppermost parallel road, owing their origin probably to the short duration of a higher level of the glacier-lake, when the great general glacier had not yet been lowered to a more permanent level determined by a limited circumscription within the walls of the valleys.
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If Agassiz or Buckland are on the Committee they will sneer at the whole thing and declare the beaches are those of a glacier-lake, than which I am sure I could convince you that there never was a more futile theory.
More Letters of Charles Darwin — Volume 2 Charles Darwin 1845
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Having been deeply impressed with what I had seen of the elevation of the land of South America, I attributed the parallel lines to the action of the sea; but I had to give up this view when Agassiz propounded his glacier-lake theory.
The Autobiography of Charles Darwin Charles Darwin 1845
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But I retain in my memory a vivid recollection of the scenery and physical features of the district, and I now consider the glacier-lake theory as affording by far the most satisfactory solution of this difficult problem.
The Antiquity of Man Charles Lyell 1836
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Such a glacier-lake Dr. Hooker actually found in existence near the head of the Yangma valley in the
The Antiquity of Man Charles Lyell 1836
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When I think of the gradual manner in which the two upper terraces die out at Glen Collarig and at the mouth of Glen Roy, the smooth rounded form of the hills there, and the lower shelf retaining its usual width where the immense barrier stood, I can deliberately repeat "that more convincing proofs of the non-existence of the imaginary Loch Roy could scarcely have been invented with full play given to the imagination," etc.: but I do not adhere to this remark with such strength when applied to the glacier-lake theory.
More Letters of Charles Darwin — Volume 2 Charles Darwin 1845
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