glacial budgets

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Glacial Budgets

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Glacial Budgets. The glacial budget or net balance. The glacial system showing inputs, stores, transfers & outputs. Inputs. Humid & cold. Ablation The process of wastage of snow or ice by melting, sublimation and calving. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Glacial Budgets

Glacial Budgets

Page 2: Glacial Budgets

The glacial budget or net balance

Page 3: Glacial Budgets

Humid & cold Inputs

The glacial system showing inputs, stores, transfers & outputs

Page 4: Glacial Budgets

AblationThe process of wastage of snow or ice by melting, sublimation and calving

Ablation on Glacier de Tsanfleuron, Switzerland causing water to run off the glacier margin. Photo J. Alean.

Page 5: Glacial Budgets

Ablation area/zoneThat part of a glacier’s surface, usually at lower elevations, over which ablationexceeds accumulation.

Ablation area of Glärnischgletscher, a small mountain glacier in northeastern Switzerland.

Page 6: Glacial Budgets

Glacier tableA boulder perched on a pedestal of ice. The boulder protects the ice from ablation during sunny weather. Around the boulder the ice surface ablates and, therefore, is lowered, whereas the boulder remains at the original level. While the pedestal becomes higher and higher in relation to the glacier surface, the sun shines further under the boulder from the south (in the northern hemisphere). Consequently the pedestal gets ablated on its southern side, and the boulder will eventually fall off the pedestal, usually on its southern side (in the northern hemisphere). After this a new cycle of table growth and destruction may begin.

Glacier table on Vadret Pers, Grisons, Switzerland.

Page 7: Glacial Budgets

AccumulationThe process of building-up of a pack of snow, refrozen slush, meltwater and firn. Net accumulation for one year is the material left over at the end of the melt-season.

Measuring the previous year’s snow accumulation on Colle Gnifetti on Monte Rosa, Switzerland.

Page 8: Glacial Budgets

Accumulation areaThat part of a glacier’s surface, usually at higher elevations, on which there is net accumulation of snow, which subsequently turns into firn and then glacier ice.

Accumulation area of Glärnischgletscher, a small mountain glacier in NE Switzerland.

Page 9: Glacial Budgets

Equilibrium line/zone The line or zone on a glacier’s surface where a year’s ablation balances a year’s accumulation (cf. Firn line). It is determined at the end of the ablation season, and commonly occurs at the boundary between superimposed ice (q.v.) and glacier ice.

The arrow in this photo actually points out the firn line. However, as the photo was taken near the end of the ablation season, the firn line more-or-less coincides with the equilibrium line.

Page 10: Glacial Budgets

CalvingThe process of detachment of icebergs and smaller blocks of ice from a glacier into water.

Calving event at Hubbard Glacier, Alaska.

Page 11: Glacial Budgets

Mass balance (or mass budget) A year-by-year measure of the state of health of a glacier, reflecting the balance between accumulation and ablation. A glacier with a positive mass balance in a particular year gained more mass through accumulation than was lost through ablation; the reverse is true for negative mass balance.

Mass balance investigations on White Glacier, Axel Heiberg Island. Photo J. Alean, 1976.

Page 12: Glacial Budgets

Glacier advance The forward movement of the snout (toe) of a glacier following successive years of positive mass balance

Crusoe Glacier, Axel Heiberg Island, has a steep front, typical of advancing glaciers. Photo J. Aleaan, 1977.

Page 13: Glacial Budgets

Glacier recession The shrinking of the snout (toe) of a glacier following successive years of negative mass balance (q.v.). This is usually evident from the recession of the ice margin on land, or calving in the sea, but also from down-wasting. Also referred to by the term glacier retreat.

Extremely rapid recession of Triftgletscher, Bernese Alps, Switzerland. Left: 2002, right 2003. Recession is accelerated by calving in the proglacial lake.

Page 14: Glacial Budgets

Glacier terminus Lowest end of a glacier

Terminus of Bergsetbreen, western Norway

Page 15: Glacial Budgets

Snout The lower part of the ablation area of a valley glacier, commonly shaped like the snout of an animal. In North America, the term toe is more widely used.

Snout of Bergsetbreen, Jostedalen, Norway