Ablation from calving and surface melt at lake-terminating Bridge Glacier, British Columbia, 1984–2013
Bridge Glacier is a lake-calving glacier in the Coast Mountains of British Columbia and has retreated over 3.55 km since 1972. The majority of this retreat has occurred since 1991. This retreat is substantially greater than what has been inferred from regional climate indices, suggesting that it has...
Main Authors: | , , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Copernicus Publications
2016-01-01
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Series: | The Cryosphere |
Online Access: | http://www.the-cryosphere.net/10/87/2016/tc-10-87-2016.pdf |
Summary: | Bridge Glacier is a lake-calving glacier in the Coast Mountains of British
Columbia and has retreated over 3.55 km since 1972. The majority of this
retreat has occurred since 1991. This retreat is substantially greater than
what has been inferred from regional climate indices, suggesting that it has
been driven primarily by calving as the glacier retreated across an
overdeepened basin. In order to better understand the primary drivers of
ablation, surface melt (below the equilibrium line altitude, ELA) and calving were quantified during the
2013 melt season using a distributed energy balance model (DEBM) and
time-lapse imagery. Calving, estimated using areal change, velocity
measurements, and assuming flotation were responsible for 23 % of the
glacier's ablation below the ELA during the 2013 melt season and were limited
by modest flow speeds and a small terminus cross-section. Calving and surface
melt estimates from 1984 to 2013 suggest that calving was consistently a
smaller contributor of ablation. Although calving was estimated to be
responsible for up to 49 % of the glacier's ablation for individual seasons,
averaged over multiple summers it accounted between 10 and 25 %. Calving was
enhanced primarily by buoyancy and water depths, and fluxes were greatest
between 2005 and 2010 as the glacier retreated over the deepest part of
Bridge Lake. The recent rapid rate of calving is part of a transient stage in
the glacier's retreat and is expected to diminish within 10 years as the
terminus recedes into shallower water at the proximal end of the lake. These
findings are in line with observations from other lake-calving glacier
studies across the globe and suggest a common large-scale pattern in
calving-induced retreat in lake-terminating alpine glaciers. Despite
enhancing glacial retreat, calving remains a relatively small component of
ablation and is expected to decrease in importance in the future. Hence,
surface melt remains the primary driver of ablation at Bridge Glacier and thus projections of future retreat should be more closely tied to climate. |
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ISSN: | 1994-0416 1994-0424 |