首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Cryosphere: ice on Niwot Ridge and in the Green Lakes Valley,Colorado Front Range
Authors:Matthias Leopold  Gabriel Lewis  David Dethier  Nel Caine  Mark W. Williams
Affiliation:1. School of Earth and Environment, The University of Western Australia, Perth, Australiamatthias.leopold@uwa.edu.au;3. Department of Geosciences, Williams College, Williamstown, MA, USA;4. Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research &5. Department of Geography, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO, USA
Abstract:Background: Subsurface ice preserved as ice lenses and within rock glaciers as well as glacial and lake ice provides sensitive indicators of climate change and serve as a late-season source of meltwater.

Aims: We synthesise the results of geomorphological, geophysical and geochemical studies during the period of 1995–2014, building on a long history of earlier work focused on ice and permafrost studies on Niwot Ridge and the adjacent Green Lakes Valley (GLV), which is part of the Niwot Ridge Long Term Ecological Research Site.

Methods: These studies are discussed in the context of how bodies of ice and rock glaciers reflect changing local climate. We review recent results from geophysical investigations (resistivity, seismic refraction and ground-penetrating radar) of the shallow subsurface, ongoing monitoring of the Arikaree Glacier, three rock glaciers and lake ice in the GLV, and interpretations of how subsurface ice melt regulates the flow and chemistry of alpine surface water after seasonal snowfields melt.

Results and conclusions: Permafrost conditions reported from Niwot Ridge in the 1970s are generally absent today, but ice lenses form and melt seasonally. Ice is present permanently within the Green Lakes 5 rock glacier and at nearby favourable sites. The Arikaree Glacier has shown a marked decline in cumulative mass balance during the past 12 years after a 30-year period when net mass balance was ca. 0. Duration of seasonal lake ice increases with elevation in GLV, but duration has decreased at all seven lakes that have been monitored during the last three decades. This decrease has been most marked at the lowest elevation where it amounted to a reduction of about 1 d year?1 and least at Green Lake 5 where the loss has been at a rate of 0.5 d year?1. Surface temperature measurements from rock glaciers have not shown strong trends during the past 15 years. It has been suggested that almost all of the 2.5-mm year?1 increase in stream discharge from the upper GLV in September and October has been derived from melting of subsurface ice.
Keywords:Arikaree Glacier  climate change  Green Lakes Valley  ice  Niwot Ridge  permafrost  rock glacier
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号