Arêtes
no they are straight lines that never intersect, intersecting lines intersect.
intersect
Moraine
No, planes intersect at a line.
Cirques intersect at their highest point, where the walls of adjacent cirques meet to form a sharp ridge or crest called an arête. This intersection often occurs at a mountain peak or ridge line.
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
Cirques
These are likely cirques, which are bowl-shaped depressions formed by glacial erosion near mountain peaks. Glaciers carve out cirques through a combination of plucking and abrasion, creating distinctive features in mountainous regions.
Cirques are the rounded basins carved into the sides of mountains by valley glaciers. They are typically characterized by steep walls and a bowl-like shape. The process of glacial erosion forming cirques is known as plucking and abrasion.
Cirques