Glacial troughs, also called U-shaped valleys, develop where glaciers flow into pre-existing V-shaped river valleys due to gravity and erode valley by abrasion and plucking
Glaciers widen and deepen and straighten the original valley making it steep sided with a wide, flat base
The mass of the ice has more erosive power than the river which originally cut the valley.
Glaciers tend to straighten the valley, cutting off spurs and leaving cliffs called truncated spurs
At the upper end of the valley where the glacier has entered the valley from the corries above, there is often a steep wall called the glacial trough.
Called parabolic due to the weathering and mass movement of the upper part of the valley sides that goes on both during the glacial period and in the subsequent periglacial period as the glacier retreats. The resultant scree slopes that accumulate at the base of the valley sides lessen the slope angle
There are often variations in the long profile of glacial troughs. When compressing flow occurs, the valley is over-deepened to form rock basins and rock steps. This process may be particularly evident where there are alternating bands of rock of different resistances on the valley floor - the weaker rocks being eroded more rapidly to form the basins.