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A crevasse is a crack in an ice sheet or glacier. Crevasses often have vertical or near-vertical walls, which can then melt and create seracs, arches, etc.; these walls sometimes expose layers that represent the glacier's stratigraphy.
A crevasse may be covered, but not necessarily filled, by a snow bridge made of the previous year's snow. Falling into a hidden crevasse that is covered by a weak snow bridge is thus a danger for mountaineers. Anyone planning to travel on a glacier should be trained in crevasse rescue.
Fracture mechanics has been used to study the growth of crevasses on glaciers. The maximum depth of a dry crevasse, predicted using an estimate of the fracture toughness of ice, is about 30 m. However, crevasses deeper than 30 m have been observed. The presence of water in a crevasse can significantly increase its penetration. Water-filled crevasses may reach the bottom of glaciers or ice sheets and provide a direct hydrologic connection between the surface, where significant summer melting occurs, and the bed of the glacier, where additional water may lubricate the bed and accelerate ice flow.
"Crevasse" is also a traditional term for a levee failure, such as those along the Mississippi River.
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Crevasse on the Gorner Glacier, Zermatt, Switzerland |
Measuring snowpack in a crevasse on the Easton Glacier, Mount Baker, North Cascades, U.S. |
Exploring the bottom of a crevasse in Antarctica |
Crevasse on the Ross Ice Shelf, January 2001. |
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The above article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the copyrighted Wikipedia "Crevasse" article.