Summary Metadata for Inventory of rock avalanches in western Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve, Alaska

The effects of climate change have the potential to impact slope stability. Negative impacts are expected to be greatest at high northerly latitudes where degradation of permafrost in rock and soil, debuttressing of slopes as a result of glacial retreat, and changes in ocean ice-cover are likely to...

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Main Authors: Erin K. Bessette-Kirton, Jeffrey A. Coe
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: USGS Science Data Catalog 2016
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/1466d2f3-ecb8-409b-b5a8-d9650dca8703
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record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:1466d2f3-ecb8-409b-b5a8-d9650dca8703 2024-10-03T18:46:05+00:00 Summary Metadata for Inventory of rock avalanches in western Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve, Alaska Erin K. Bessette-Kirton Jeffrey A. Coe ENVELOPE(-137.69092,-136.83514,58.989807,58.52358) BEGINDATE: 1984-06-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2016-10-01T00:00:00Z 2016-01-01T00:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/1466d2f3-ecb8-409b-b5a8-d9650dca8703 unknown USGS Science Data Catalog rock avalanche climate change glacier Landsat remote sensing landslide inventory false color composite permafrost landslide Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve Alaska Dataset 2016 dataone:urn:node:USGS_SDC 2024-10-03T18:10:03Z The effects of climate change have the potential to impact slope stability. Negative impacts are expected to be greatest at high northerly latitudes where degradation of permafrost in rock and soil, debuttressing of slopes as a result of glacial retreat, and changes in ocean ice-cover are likely to increase the susceptibility of slopes to landslides. In the United States, the greatest increases in air temperature and precipitation are expected to occur in Alaska. In order to assess the impact that these environmental changes will have on landslide size (magnitude), mobility, and frequency, inventories of historical landslides are needed. These inventories provide baseline data that can be used to identify changes between historical and future landslide magnitude, mobility, and frequency. This data release presents GIS and attribute data for an inventory of rock avalanches in a 5000 sq. km area of western Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve, Alaska. We created the inventory from 30 m resolution Landsat imagery acquired from June 1984 to September 2016. For each calendar year, we visually examined a minimum of one Landsat image obtained between the months of May and October. We examined a total of 104 Landsat images. The contrast between the spectral signatures of freshly exposed rock avalanche source areas and deposits and surrounding, undisturbed snow and ice is typically significant enough to detect surficial changes. We identified and mapped rock avalanches by locating areas with 1) high contrast compared to surrounding snow and ice, 2) different spectral signatures between successive Landsat images, and 3) lobate forms typical of rock-avalanche deposits. Using these criteria, we mapped a total of 24 rock avalanches ranging in size from 0.1 to 22 km2. Attribute data for each rock avalanche includes: a date, or range in possible dates, of occurrence; the name of the Landsat image(s) used to identify and map the avalanche; the total area covered by the rock avalanche (including the source area and deposit); the maximum travel distance measured along a curvilinear centerline (L); and the change in elevation between the start and end points of the centerline (H). We also include a table containing a list of all the Landsat images examined. We acknowledge that our mapped polygons will be different, and less accurate, than polygons that could be mapped from higher-resolution satellite, aerial, and hand-held imagery. We specifically chose not to use high resolution imagery because we desired a long-term historical inventory that was unbiased by changes in image resolution. Eventually, new mapping should be done to create an inventory that fully utilizes recently available high-resolution imagery. Data included in this release form the basis of an interpretive paper available in the conference proceedings of the 3rd North American Symposium on Landslides held in Roanoke, Virginia in June, 2017. Dataset glacier Ice permafrost Alaska USGS Science Data Catalog (via DataONE) Glacier Bay Western Glacier ENVELOPE(-63.745,-63.745,58.887,58.887) ENVELOPE(-137.69092,-136.83514,58.989807,58.52358)
institution Open Polar
collection USGS Science Data Catalog (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:USGS_SDC
language unknown
topic rock avalanche
climate change
glacier
Landsat
remote sensing
landslide inventory
false color composite
permafrost
landslide
Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve
Alaska
spellingShingle rock avalanche
climate change
glacier
Landsat
remote sensing
landslide inventory
false color composite
permafrost
landslide
Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve
Alaska
Erin K. Bessette-Kirton
Jeffrey A. Coe
Summary Metadata for Inventory of rock avalanches in western Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve, Alaska
topic_facet rock avalanche
climate change
glacier
Landsat
remote sensing
landslide inventory
false color composite
permafrost
landslide
Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve
Alaska
description The effects of climate change have the potential to impact slope stability. Negative impacts are expected to be greatest at high northerly latitudes where degradation of permafrost in rock and soil, debuttressing of slopes as a result of glacial retreat, and changes in ocean ice-cover are likely to increase the susceptibility of slopes to landslides. In the United States, the greatest increases in air temperature and precipitation are expected to occur in Alaska. In order to assess the impact that these environmental changes will have on landslide size (magnitude), mobility, and frequency, inventories of historical landslides are needed. These inventories provide baseline data that can be used to identify changes between historical and future landslide magnitude, mobility, and frequency. This data release presents GIS and attribute data for an inventory of rock avalanches in a 5000 sq. km area of western Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve, Alaska. We created the inventory from 30 m resolution Landsat imagery acquired from June 1984 to September 2016. For each calendar year, we visually examined a minimum of one Landsat image obtained between the months of May and October. We examined a total of 104 Landsat images. The contrast between the spectral signatures of freshly exposed rock avalanche source areas and deposits and surrounding, undisturbed snow and ice is typically significant enough to detect surficial changes. We identified and mapped rock avalanches by locating areas with 1) high contrast compared to surrounding snow and ice, 2) different spectral signatures between successive Landsat images, and 3) lobate forms typical of rock-avalanche deposits. Using these criteria, we mapped a total of 24 rock avalanches ranging in size from 0.1 to 22 km2. Attribute data for each rock avalanche includes: a date, or range in possible dates, of occurrence; the name of the Landsat image(s) used to identify and map the avalanche; the total area covered by the rock avalanche (including the source area and deposit); the maximum travel distance measured along a curvilinear centerline (L); and the change in elevation between the start and end points of the centerline (H). We also include a table containing a list of all the Landsat images examined. We acknowledge that our mapped polygons will be different, and less accurate, than polygons that could be mapped from higher-resolution satellite, aerial, and hand-held imagery. We specifically chose not to use high resolution imagery because we desired a long-term historical inventory that was unbiased by changes in image resolution. Eventually, new mapping should be done to create an inventory that fully utilizes recently available high-resolution imagery. Data included in this release form the basis of an interpretive paper available in the conference proceedings of the 3rd North American Symposium on Landslides held in Roanoke, Virginia in June, 2017.
format Dataset
author Erin K. Bessette-Kirton
Jeffrey A. Coe
author_facet Erin K. Bessette-Kirton
Jeffrey A. Coe
author_sort Erin K. Bessette-Kirton
title Summary Metadata for Inventory of rock avalanches in western Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve, Alaska
title_short Summary Metadata for Inventory of rock avalanches in western Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve, Alaska
title_full Summary Metadata for Inventory of rock avalanches in western Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve, Alaska
title_fullStr Summary Metadata for Inventory of rock avalanches in western Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve, Alaska
title_full_unstemmed Summary Metadata for Inventory of rock avalanches in western Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve, Alaska
title_sort summary metadata for inventory of rock avalanches in western glacier bay national park and preserve, alaska
publisher USGS Science Data Catalog
publishDate 2016
url https://search.dataone.org/view/1466d2f3-ecb8-409b-b5a8-d9650dca8703
op_coverage ENVELOPE(-137.69092,-136.83514,58.989807,58.52358)
BEGINDATE: 1984-06-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2016-10-01T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(-63.745,-63.745,58.887,58.887)
ENVELOPE(-137.69092,-136.83514,58.989807,58.52358)
geographic Glacier Bay
Western Glacier
geographic_facet Glacier Bay
Western Glacier
genre glacier
Ice
permafrost
Alaska
genre_facet glacier
Ice
permafrost
Alaska
_version_ 1811924201570828288