Remember what we learned in the "What's a Glacier" segment?
Glaciers are massive and incredibly powerful but they begin with small snowflakes.
Imagine how many it takes to make a glacier as snow gradually changes into glacier ice.
Glaciers are composed of ice which is one of natures most beautiful and elegant substances and which can form in the atmosphere as snow.
The firn line on a glacier is the zone that separates bare ice from snow at the end of the ablation season.
The Vedretta di Fellario Orientale Glacier in the Italian Alps

Photo by Alean
Neve

Photo by James Roush
The area of a glacier covered with snow throughout the year is called, Neve. The term also refers to the accumulation area at the upper end of a glacier. Glaciologists land their planes in this area as it is relatively safe from crevassing.
Snowfall on a glacier is the first step in the formation of glacier ice.
As snow builds up, snowflakes are packed into grains.
The weight of the overlying snow causes the grains below to become coarser and larger. (Fresh snow is about 90% air.)
Melted snow quickly refreezes forming ice. How the snow changes and how much time it takes to develop into glacier ice depends on the temperature.In an area where there is more snow fall than summer snow melt, perennial snow patches appear in the mountains and remain at the end of summer. Glaciers can form in areas where summer temperatures are too low for all of the snow to melt.
Animation by Ben Barton

Firn is wetted snow that has survived one summer without being transformed to ice. It is in the metamorphic process of snow-becoming-ice. Eventually, firn changes into solid glacier ice.
* Firn takes about a year to form. (In colder parts of the world, this could take as long as 100 years).
* Firn becomes glacier ice when the interconnecting air passages between the grains are sealed off. In glacier ice, air is present only as bubbles. Ice may become denser by more compression of the bubbles.

Remember, the scanning electron micrographs of the firn cyrstals and the snowflake shown in "What's a Glacier?" Here again, you can see the great difference between snow and firn. There is also a great difference between firn cyrstals and glacier ice crystals.

Folia/Foliations are individual layers or bands of ice crystals produced during the metamorphic process and compression that changes snow to glacier ice. The layers have distinctive crystal sizes and usually alternate between bubbly and clear ice or between fine-grained and coarse-grained ice.
The process shown here has been greatly speeded up!
Animation by Ben Barton

When the weight of the ice and snow (thickening snowfield) becomes great enough, they begin to move (flow down-slope). When signs of flow appear in a perennial snow patch, a glacier has begun! No longer only a mass of ice and snow, it is a glacier!
firn
perennial
firn line
metamorphic
compression
snowflake
gravity
(some of the answers may come from the vocabulary list)
Circle all the statements that are true about each word given (more than one statement may be true):
You'll need:
Mix the ice in your small container with enough water to make a slushy snow. Seal the container. Next, make an ice bath with a mixture of half water and half ice and sink your sealed container into the bath. If you're able, put the whole experiment into a refrigerator.
After 24 hours, remove the sealed container and drain all the water. Use some tissue to pat dry the snow.
Reseal the container and put it back in the ice bath for a few hours.
When this is done, pull the sealed container out and look at the remaining ice with a magnifying lens of at least 5x magnification. You should see clusters of rounded ice particles, very similar to the structure of firn.
(Courtesy Glaciers of North America, By S. Ferguson)