Supraglacial Ice Cliffs Can Substantially Increase the Mass Loss of Debris‐Covered Glaciers
Buri, Pascal; Miles, Evan S.; Steiner, Jakob F.; Ragettli, Silvan; Pellicciotti, Francesca
(2021) Geophysical Research Letters, volume 48, issue 6
(Article)
Abstract
The thinning patterns of debris-covered glaciers in High Mountain Asia are not well understood. Here we calculate the effect of supraglacial ice cliffs on the mass balance of all glaciers in a Himalayan catchment, using a process-based ice cliff melt model. We show that ice cliffs are responsible for higher
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than expected thinning rates of debris-covered glacier tongues, leading to an underestimation of their ice mass loss of 17% ± 4% in the catchment if not considered. We also show that cliffs do enhance melt where other processes would suppress it, that is, at high elevations, or where debris is thick, and that they contribute relatively more to glacier mass loss if oriented north. Our approach provides a key contribution to our understanding of the mass losses of debris-covered glaciers, and a new quantification of their catchment wide melt and mass balance.
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Keywords: Nepalese Himalayas, contribution of ice cliffs to glacier melt, debris-covered glaciers, supraglacial ice cliffs, Geophysics, General Earth and Planetary Sciences
ISSN: 0094-8276
Publisher: Wiley Online Library
Note: Funding Information: The authors thank Tek Rai and his logistics team, as well as Simon Wicki, Anna Chesnokova, Ian Willis, Ibai Rico, and Peter Hill for the help during our field work in Langtang Valley in May and October 2014. The authors acknowledge the efforts of Walter Immerzeel, Joseph Shea, and ICIMOD to install and maintain a meteorological network in the Langtang Valley, which we used to complement our on-glacier stations. This study was funded by the SNF-project UNCOMUN (grant no. 146761) and the ERC-project RAVEN (grant no. 772751) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program. Pascal Buri acknowledges funding from the SNF Early Postdoc.Mobility program (grant no. 178420). The views and interpretations in this study are those of the authors and are not necessarily attributable to ICIMOD. The authors want to thank the Scientific Editor M. Morlighem, and three anonymous reviewers for their thorough and helpful comments, which greatly improved the paper. Funding Information: The authors thank Tek Rai and his logistics team, as well as Simon Wicki, Anna Chesnokova, Ian Willis, Ibai Rico, and Peter Hill for the help during our field work in Langtang Valley in May and October 2014. The authors acknowledge the efforts of Walter Immerzeel, Joseph Shea, and ICIMOD to install and maintain a meteorological network in the Langtang Valley, which we used to complement our on‐glacier stations. This study was funded by the SNF‐project (grant no. 146761) and the ERC‐project (grant no. 772751) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program. Pascal Buri acknowledges funding from the SNF Early Postdoc.Mobility program (grant no. 178420). The views and interpretations in this study are those of the authors and are not necessarily attributable to ICIMOD. The authors want to thank the Scientific Editor M. Morlighem, and three anonymous reviewers for their thorough and helpful comments, which greatly improved the paper. UNCOMUN RAVEN Publisher Copyright: © 2021. The Authors.
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