Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Coincident glacier and lake evolution across New Zealand: Past, present, and future
View through CrossRef
<p>Mountain glaciers are rapidly diminishing and causing widespread environmental and socio-economic concern. The stability of mountain glaciers is influenced by the expansion of proglacial landscapes and meltwater impounded as lakes within natural topographic depressions or &#8216;overdeepenings&#8217;. In particular, the relative sensitivity of mid-latitude glaciers to modern climate change makes them especially important to consider. One of the most striking features of South Island, New Zealand, is the sequence of glacial lakes that occupy mountain valleys along the Southern Alps. Our previous work has highlighted that the presence of these lakes is likely to have had an impact on ice-marginal dynamics of their adjacent glaciers, thereby influencing the rate of deglaciation on sub-millennial timescales. This emphasizes the need to incorporate proglacial lakes into palaeoglacier reconstructions and into analyses of future glacier evolution. In this new study we (i) document contemporary loss of glacier ice across the Southern Alps, (ii) analyse ice-marginal lake development since the 1980s, (iii) utilise modelled glacier ice thickness to suggest the position and size of future lakes, and (iv) employ a large-scale glacier evolution model to suggest the timing of future lake formation and future lake expansion rate. In recent decades, Southern Alps glaciers have fragmented both by separation of tributaries and by detachment of ablation zones. Glacier margins in contact with a proglacial lake have experienced the greatest terminus retreat. Our analysis indicates a positive relationship between mean glacier mass balance and rate of lake growth and with length of an ice-contact lake boundary. We project sustained and relatively homogenous glacier volume loss for east-draining basins but in contrast a heterogenous pattern of volume loss for west-draining basins. Our model results show that ice-marginal lakes will increase in number and combined size towards 2050 and then decrease to 2100 as glaciers disconnect from them. Overall, our findings should inform (i) glacier evolution models into which ice-marginal lake effects need incorporating, (ii) studies of rapid landscape evolution and especially of meltwater and sediment delivery, and (iii) considerations of future meltwater supply and water quality.</p>
Title: Coincident glacier and lake evolution across New Zealand: Past, present, and future
Description:
<p>Mountain glaciers are rapidly diminishing and causing widespread environmental and socio-economic concern.
The stability of mountain glaciers is influenced by the expansion of proglacial landscapes and meltwater impounded as lakes within natural topographic depressions or &#8216;overdeepenings&#8217;.
In particular, the relative sensitivity of mid-latitude glaciers to modern climate change makes them especially important to consider.
One of the most striking features of South Island, New Zealand, is the sequence of glacial lakes that occupy mountain valleys along the Southern Alps.
Our previous work has highlighted that the presence of these lakes is likely to have had an impact on ice-marginal dynamics of their adjacent glaciers, thereby influencing the rate of deglaciation on sub-millennial timescales.
This emphasizes the need to incorporate proglacial lakes into palaeoglacier reconstructions and into analyses of future glacier evolution.
In this new study we (i) document contemporary loss of glacier ice across the Southern Alps, (ii) analyse ice-marginal lake development since the 1980s, (iii) utilise modelled glacier ice thickness to suggest the position and size of future lakes, and (iv) employ a large-scale glacier evolution model to suggest the timing of future lake formation and future lake expansion rate.
In recent decades, Southern Alps glaciers have fragmented both by separation of tributaries and by detachment of ablation zones.
Glacier margins in contact with a proglacial lake have experienced the greatest terminus retreat.
Our analysis indicates a positive relationship between mean glacier mass balance and rate of lake growth and with length of an ice-contact lake boundary.
We project sustained and relatively homogenous glacier volume loss for east-draining basins but in contrast a heterogenous pattern of volume loss for west-draining basins.
Our model results show that ice-marginal lakes will increase in number and combined size towards 2050 and then decrease to 2100 as glaciers disconnect from them.
Overall, our findings should inform (i) glacier evolution models into which ice-marginal lake effects need incorporating, (ii) studies of rapid landscape evolution and especially of meltwater and sediment delivery, and (iii) considerations of future meltwater supply and water quality.
</p>.
Related Results
Glacier Mass Loss Simulation Based on Remote Sensing Data: A Case Study of the Yala Glacier and the Qiyi Glacier in the Third Pole
Glacier Mass Loss Simulation Based on Remote Sensing Data: A Case Study of the Yala Glacier and the Qiyi Glacier in the Third Pole
The climate warming over the Third Pole is twice as large as that in other regions and glacier mass loss is considered to be more intensive in the region. However, due to the vast ...
Holocene thinning history of David Glacier, Antarctica
Holocene thinning history of David Glacier, Antarctica
<p>The Antarctic Ice Sheet is a significant component of the Earth System, modulating Earth‘s sea level and climate. Present day and projected ice mass losses from Antarctica...
Glacier Speed-Up Events and Subglacial Hydrology on the Lower Franz Josef Glacier, New Zealand
Glacier Speed-Up Events and Subglacial Hydrology on the Lower Franz Josef Glacier, New Zealand
<p>The contribution of glacier mass loss to future sea level rise is still poorly constrained (Lemke and others, 2007). One of the remaining unknowns is how water inputs infl...
Studies on the Basal-Ice Zone of Findelen Glacier, Switzerland
Studies on the Basal-Ice Zone of Findelen Glacier, Switzerland
Basal and englacial debris layers have been observed to coincide distinctly with the location of glacier thrust planes or shear zones, e.g. at Shoestring Glacier (Brugman and Meier...
Glaciers Variation at ‘Shocking’ Pace in the Northeastern Margin of Tibetan Plateau from 1957 to 21st Century: A Case Study of Qiyi Glacier
Glaciers Variation at ‘Shocking’ Pace in the Northeastern Margin of Tibetan Plateau from 1957 to 21st Century: A Case Study of Qiyi Glacier
Accelerating glacier shrinkage is one of the most consequential of global warming. Yet, projections for the region remain ambiguous because of the tremendous spatial heterogeneity,...
Geomorphology of the lakebed and sediment deposition during the Holocene in Lake Visovac
Geomorphology of the lakebed and sediment deposition during the Holocene in Lake Visovac
<p>Lake Visovac is a tufa barrier lake on the Krka River between Ro&#353;ki slap (60 m asl) and Skradinski buk (46 m absl) waterfalls, included in the Krka na...
A Multimethod Investigation of the Lake Agnes Rock Glacier, Colorado, USA
A Multimethod Investigation of the Lake Agnes Rock Glacier, Colorado, USA
ABSTRACTRock glaciers are important headwater landforms that play a key role in alpine hydrology. North American rock glaciers are estimated to contain the third largest water volu...
Predicting the Risk of Glacial Lake Outburst Floods in Karakorum
Predicting the Risk of Glacial Lake Outburst Floods in Karakorum
Abstract. Glacier snouts respond to climate change by forming proglacial meltwater lakes, thereby influencing glacier mass balance and leading to advancements and surges. The posit...

