proglacial lake
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2021 ◽  
pp. 1-18
Author(s):  
Nicholas Zaremba ◽  
Christopher A. Scholz

Abstract The deglaciation record of the Ontario Lowland and Mohawk Valley of North America is important for constraining the retreat history of the Laurentide Ice Sheet, end-Pleistocene paleoclimate, and ice-sheet processes. The Mohawk Valley was an important meltwater drainage route during the last deglaciation, with the area around modern Oneida Lake acting as a valve for meltwater discharge into the North Atlantic Ocean. The Mohawk Valley was occupied by the Oneida Lobe and Oneida Ice Stream during the last deglacial period. Multichannel seismic reflection data can be used to generate images of preglacial surfaces and internal structures of glacial bedforms and proglacial lake deposits, thus contributing to studies of deglaciation. This paper uses 217 km of offshore multichannel seismic reflection data to image the entire Quaternary section of the Oneida basin. A proglacial lake and paleo-calving margin is interpreted, which likely accelerated the Oneida Ice Stream, resulting in elongated bedforms observed west of the lake. The glacial bedforms identified in this study are buried by proglacial lake deposits, indicating the Oneida basin contains a record of glacial meltwater processes, including a 60-m-thick proglacial interval in eastern Oneida Lake.


Boreas ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Larisa Nazarova ◽  
Dirk Sachse ◽  
Harald G. E. Fuchs ◽  
Veronika Dirksen ◽  
Oleg Dirksen ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (15) ◽  
pp. 2987
Author(s):  
Adrian Dye ◽  
Robert Bryant ◽  
Emma Dodd ◽  
Fran Falcini ◽  
David M. Rippin

Despite an increase in heatwaves and rising air temperatures in the Arctic, little research has been conducted into the temperatures of proglacial lakes in the region. An assumption persists that they are cold and uniformly feature a temperature of 1 °C. This is important to test, given the rising air temperatures in the region (reported in this study) and potential to increase water temperatures, thus increasing subaqueous melting and the retreat of glacier termini from where they are in contact with lakes. Through analysis of ASTER surface temperature product data, we report warm (>4 °C) proglacial lake surface water temperatures (LSWT) for both ice-contact and non-ice-contact lakes, as well as substantial spatial heterogeneity. We present in situ validation data (from problematic maritime areas) and a workflow that facilitates the extraction of robust LSWT data from the high-resolution (90 m) ASTER surface temperature product (AST08). This enables spatial patterns to be analysed in conjunction with surrounding thermal influences, such as parent glaciers and topographies. This workflow can be utilised for the analysis of the LSWT data of other small lakes and crucially allows high spatial resolution study of how they have responded to changes in climate. Further study of the LSWT is essential in the Arctic given the amplification of climate change across the region.


Author(s):  
Emrys Phillips ◽  
Gareth Carter ◽  
Derek Teasdale

Microscale analysis of unlithified glacial soils can provide far greater detail regarding their depositional and deformation histories than can be obtained from macroscale studies alone. This paper presents the results of three detailed case studies which examine the processes occurring during overriding and emplacement of mass flows in glacial environments: (i) laminated soils deposited in a proglacial lake setting at Heinabergsjökull, Iceland; (ii) a channelised, ice-marginal to submarginal mass flow at Whitburn (County Durham), England; and (iii) a mass flow exposed at Carstairs, Central Scotland which was emplaced in a glaciofluvial to glaciolacustrine setting. Microscale evidence from all three sites is combined to develop a conceptual model of the role played by water during mass flow; from the initial soil disruption under and/or in front of an advancing mass flow, to the formation of a basal shear zone facilitating mass flow transport and emplacement, through to the decoupling of the flow from the underlying substrate as a result of the injection of fluidised soil along its base. The development of these detachments during mass flow has the potential to increase the velocity of the flow and its run out distance, increasing the potential impact of these geohazards.Thematic collection: This article is part of the Role of water in destabilizing slopes collection available at: https://www.lyellcollection.org/cc/Role-of-water-in-destabilizing-slopes


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Felix Bernsteiner ◽  
Andreas Kellerer-Pirklbauer

<p>The recession of glaciers reveals a dynamic landscape exposed to high rates of hydrological and geomorphological modifications. Such deglaciation processes caused the formation of a 0.3 km² large proglacial lake (named Pasterzensee) near the terminus of Pasterze Glacier, Austria, during the last two decades. The evolution of the proglacial lake was accompanied by several buoyant calving events. The process of buoyant calving formed numerous floating dead ice bodies referred to as icebergs which covered a maximum of 7.3 % of the entire proglacial lake basin in November 2018.</p><p>Despite the existence of icebergs at some proglacial lakes in the European Alps, little is known about the evolution and life span of icebergs in proglacial lakes in the European Alps. The aim of this study was to reduce this research gap by (a) quantifying the evolution of such alpine icebergs during two different time scales and by (b) analysing the relationship between iceberg evolution and motion at the lake with meteorological conditions. At a long-term scale, one single iceberg was monitored during the period 01.09.2017-30.09.2019. At a short-term scale, all icebergs were studied during one single day (16.06.2019).</p><p>The most important data source for this study were time-lapse optical imagery from an automatic camera overlooking the entire proglacial lake (GROHAG). The used camera is a Roundshot Livecam Generation 2 (Seitz, Switzerland). Photographic imagery is captured every five minutes (during daylight) from a location 310 m above lake level and 450 m northeast of the lake margin. For the long-term analysis, a total number of 386 pictures of the lake were processed. For the short-term analysis, 97 pictures were analysed to reveal the dynamics of 84 icebergs during one single day. The oblique time-lapse images were transformed into orthorectified photos using a rectification algorithm which considers the camera properties and the lake surface geometry. Iceberg size and centroid coordinates were mapped in all generated orthophotos. In addition, meteorological data (ZAMG Vienna) was provided by a nearby automatic weather station, located at the glacier tongue of Pasterze Glacier some 1.1 km northwest of the lake margin.</p><p>Results indicate that the monitoring of one iceberg over a period of 25 months revealed highest melting rates from June to August, low melting rates from September to November and no measurable melting when the lake surface is frozen. Horizontal iceberg displacement is rising with decreasing iceberg size throughout the study period. The analysed iceberg formed during the detachment of a debris covered ice peninsula with an initial size of 7250 m² and was last identifiable at a size of 240 m². Monitoring lake-wide iceberg movement for one day shows that wind is the main influence on horizontal iceberg displacement. The existence of a strong valley wind, caused by a diurnal warming cycle, is observed. This wind system decouples the iceberg movement from the constant katabatic glacier wind, recorded by the weather station. Frequent jumps in movement rates, which are not explained by wind data, suggest that iceberg grounding is a common process influencing subaquatic lake morphology.</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 741-766 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fang Chen ◽  
Meimei Zhang ◽  
Huadong Guo ◽  
Simon Allen ◽  
Jeffrey S. Kargel ◽  
...  

Abstract. Atmospheric warming is intensifying glacier melting and glacial-lake development in High Mountain Asia (HMA), and this could increase glacial-lake outburst flood (GLOF) hazards and impact water resources and hydroelectric-power management. There is therefore a pressing need to obtain comprehensive knowledge of the distribution and area of glacial lakes and also to quantify the variability in their sizes and types at high resolution in HMA. In this work, we developed an HMA glacial-lake inventory (Hi-MAG) database to characterize the annual coverage of glacial lakes from 2008 to 2017 at 30 m resolution using Landsat satellite imagery. Our data show that glacial lakes exhibited a total area increase of 90.14 km2 in the period 2008–2017, a +6.90 % change relative to 2008 (1305.59±213.99 km2). The annual increases in the number and area of lakes were 306 and 12 km2, respectively, and the greatest increase in the number of lakes occurred at 5400 m elevation, which increased by 249. Proglacial-lake-dominated areas, such as the Nyainqêntanglha and central Himalaya, where more than half of the glacial-lake area (summed over a 1∘ × 1∘ grid) consisted of proglacial lakes, showed obvious lake-area expansion. Conversely, some regions of eastern Tibetan mountains and Hengduan Shan, where unconnected glacial lakes occupied over half of the total lake area in each grid, exhibited stability or a slight reduction in lake area. Our results demonstrate that proglacial lakes are a main contributor to recent lake evolution in HMA, accounting for 62.87 % (56.67 km2) of the total area increase. Proglacial lakes in the Himalaya ranges alone accounted for 36.27 % (32.70 km2) of the total area increase. Regional geographic variability in debris cover, together with trends in warming and precipitation over the past few decades, largely explains the current distribution of supraglacial- and proglacial-lake area across HMA. The Hi-MAG database is available at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4275164 (Chen et al., 2020), and it can be used for studies of the complex interactions between glaciers, climate and glacial lakes, studies of GLOFs, and water resources.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Junfeng Wei ◽  
Shiyin Liu ◽  
Xin Wang ◽  
Yong Zhang ◽  
Zongli Jiang ◽  
...  

Abstract During the last few decades, the lake-terminating glaciers in the Himalaya have receded faster than the land-terminating glaciers as proglacial lakes have exacerbated the mass loss of their host glaciers. Monitoring the impacts of glacier recession and dynamics on lake extent and water volume provides an approach to assess the mass interplay between glaciers and proglacial lakes. We describe the recession of Longbasaba Glacier and estimate the mass wastage and its contribution to the water volume of its proglacial lake. The results show that the glacier area has decreased by 3% during 1988–2018, with a more variable recession prior to 2008 than in the last decade. Longbasaba Lake has expanded by 164% in area and 237% in water volume, primarily as a result of meltwater inflow produced from surface lowering of the glacier. Over the periods 1988–2000 and 2000–18, the mass loss contributed by glacier thinning has decreased from 81 to 61% of the total mass loss, accompanied by a nearly doubled contribution from terminus retreat. With the current rate of retreat, Longbasaba glacier is expected to terminate in its proglacial lake for another four decades. The hazard risk of this lake is expected to continue to increase in the near future because of the projected continued glacier mass loss and related lake expansion.


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