Mechanical grinding of bedrock by glacial erosion creates rock flour or glacial flour, which is known as glacial milk when mixed with water. Here, a river full of glacial milk flows into the Cook Inlet in southern Alaska, USA Copernicus Sentinel-2B data.
Mechanical grinding of bedrock by glacial erosion creates rock flour or glacial flour, which is known as glacial milk when mixed with water. Here, a river full of glacial milk flows into the Cook Inlet in southern Alaska, USA Copernicus Sentinel-2B data.
Mechanical grinding of bedrock by glacial erosion creates rock flour or glacial flour, which is known as glacial milk when mixed with water. Here, a river full of glacial milk flows into the Cook Inlet in southern Alaska, USA Copernicus Sentinel-2B data.
Mechanical grinding of bedrock by glacial erosion creates rock flour or glacial flour, which is known as glacial milk when mixed with water. Here, a river full of glacial milk flows into the Cook Inlet in southern Alaska, USA Copernicus Sentinel-2B data.
Mechanical grinding of bedrock by glacial erosion creates rock flour or glacial flour, which is known as glacial milk when mixed with water. Here, a river full of glacial milk flows into the Cook Inlet in southern Alaska, USA Copernicus Sentinel-2B data.
Mechanical grinding of bedrock by glacial erosion creates rock flour or glacial flour, which is known as glacial milk when mixed with water. Here, a river full of glacial milk flows into the Cook Inlet in southern Alaska, USA Copernicus Sentinel-2B data.
Mechanical grinding of bedrock by glacial erosion creates rock flour or glacial flour, which is known as glacial milk when mixed with water. Here, a river full of glacial milk flows into the Cook Inlet in southern Alaska, USA Copernicus Sentinel-2B data.
Mechanical grinding of bedrock by glacial erosion creates rock flour or glacial flour, which is known as glacial milk when mixed with water. Here, a river full of glacial milk flows into the Cook Inlet in southern Alaska, USA Copernicus Sentinel-2B data.
Mechanical grinding of bedrock by glacial erosion creates rock flour or glacial flour, which is known as glacial milk when mixed with water. Here, a river full of glacial milk flows into the Cook Inlet in southern Alaska, USA Copernicus Sentinel-2B data.
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