Arêtes
no they are straight lines that never intersect, intersecting lines intersect.
Moraine
intersect
No, planes intersect at a line.
Cirques could intersect at an intermediate ridge. This would be less common.
Steep-sided, half-bowl shaped recesses carved into mountains at the heads of glacial valleys. The Fjords: Steep cliffs, acting as ocean inlets. Horn peaks: Where cirques intersect. Terminal moraines: Piles of rocks. Crevasses: Cracks in glaciers
Cirque: A bowl-shaped depression on the side of a mountain, formed by the erosive activity of a glacier. Cirques are typically characterized by steep walls and may contain a small lake called a tarn at their base.
Fjords: Steep ocean inlets Drumlins: Smooth hills Cirques: Armchair-shaped valleys Moraines: Piles of rocks :D
TRIANGLESthey are cirques
WEATHERING
this is a peproduction
Glaciers grind into mountains by eroding the cirques at their heads. If a mountain has cirques all around it, it is called a horn
This is false,cirques are caused when erosion at the beginning of a glacier wears down the walls of mountain peaks.Over time,this process creates bowl-shaped basins called cirques.
Cirques
erosion
Cirques