Spatial Analysis of Cirques from Three Regions of Iceland: Implications for Cirque Formation and Palaeoclimate

This study is a quantitative analysis of cirques in three regions of Iceland: Tröllaskagi, the East Fjords and Vestfirðir. Using Google Earth and the National Land Survey of Iceland Map Viewer, we identified 347 new cirques on Tröllaskagi and the East Fjords region, and combined these data with 100...

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Main Authors: Ipsen, Heather A., Principato, Sarah M., Grube, Rachael E., Lee, Jessica F.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: The Cupola: Scholarship at Gettysburg College 2018
Subjects:
Ela
Online Access:https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/esfac/97
https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1102&context=esfac
id ftgettysburgcoll:oai:cupola.gettysburg.edu:esfac-1102
record_format openpolar
spelling ftgettysburgcoll:oai:cupola.gettysburg.edu:esfac-1102 2023-05-15T16:45:39+02:00 Spatial Analysis of Cirques from Three Regions of Iceland: Implications for Cirque Formation and Palaeoclimate Ipsen, Heather A. Principato, Sarah M. Grube, Rachael E. Lee, Jessica F. 2018-03-25T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/esfac/97 https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1102&context=esfac unknown The Cupola: Scholarship at Gettysburg College https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/esfac/97 https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1102&context=esfac Environmental Studies Faculty Publications Cirques Iceland climate record glaciers ice caps Climate Environmental Sciences Environmental Studies article 2018 ftgettysburgcoll 2022-04-09T18:52:47Z This study is a quantitative analysis of cirques in three regions of Iceland: Tröllaskagi, the East Fjords and Vestfirðir. Using Google Earth and the National Land Survey of Iceland Map Viewer, we identified 347 new cirques on Tröllaskagi and the East Fjords region, and combined these data with 100 cirques previously identified on Vestfirðir. We used ArcGIS to measure length, width, aspect, latitude and distance to coastline of each cirque. Palaeo‐equilibrium‐line altitudes (palaeo‐ELAs) of palaeo‐cirque glaciers were calculated using the altitude‐ratio method, cirque‐floor method and minimum‐point method. The mean palaeo‐ELA values in Tröllaskagi, the East Fjords and Vestfirðir are 788, 643 and 408 m a.s.l, respectively. Interpolation maps of palaeo‐ELAs demonstrate a positive relationship between palaeo‐ELA and distance to coastline. A positive relationship between palaeo‐ELA and latitude is observed on Vestfirðir, a negative relationship is observed on Tröllaskagi and no statistically significant relationship is present on the East Fjords. The modal orientation of cirques on Tröllaskagi and Vestfirðir is northeast, while orientation of cirques in the East Fjords is north. Palaeo‐wind reconstructions for the LGM show that modal aspect is aligned with the prevailing north‐northeast wind directions, although aspect measurements demonstrate wide dispersion. Cirque length is similar on Tröllaskagi and the East Fjords, but cirques are approximately 200 m shorter in Vestfirðir. Cirque widths are similar in all three regions. Comparisons with a global data set show that cirques in Iceland are smaller and more circular than cirques in other regions of the world. Similar to glaciers in Norway and Kamchatka, our results demonstrate that access to a moisture source is a key parameter in determining palaeo‐ELAs in Iceland. Temperatures interpreted from palaeo‐ELA depressions suggest that these cirques may have been glaciated as recently as the Little Ice Age. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland Kamchatka The Cupola - Scholarship at Gettysburg College Ela ENVELOPE(9.642,9.642,63.170,63.170) Norway Vestfirðir ENVELOPE(-22.500,-22.500,65.667,65.667)
institution Open Polar
collection The Cupola - Scholarship at Gettysburg College
op_collection_id ftgettysburgcoll
language unknown
topic Cirques
Iceland
climate record
glaciers
ice caps
Climate
Environmental Sciences
Environmental Studies
spellingShingle Cirques
Iceland
climate record
glaciers
ice caps
Climate
Environmental Sciences
Environmental Studies
Ipsen, Heather A.
Principato, Sarah M.
Grube, Rachael E.
Lee, Jessica F.
Spatial Analysis of Cirques from Three Regions of Iceland: Implications for Cirque Formation and Palaeoclimate
topic_facet Cirques
Iceland
climate record
glaciers
ice caps
Climate
Environmental Sciences
Environmental Studies
description This study is a quantitative analysis of cirques in three regions of Iceland: Tröllaskagi, the East Fjords and Vestfirðir. Using Google Earth and the National Land Survey of Iceland Map Viewer, we identified 347 new cirques on Tröllaskagi and the East Fjords region, and combined these data with 100 cirques previously identified on Vestfirðir. We used ArcGIS to measure length, width, aspect, latitude and distance to coastline of each cirque. Palaeo‐equilibrium‐line altitudes (palaeo‐ELAs) of palaeo‐cirque glaciers were calculated using the altitude‐ratio method, cirque‐floor method and minimum‐point method. The mean palaeo‐ELA values in Tröllaskagi, the East Fjords and Vestfirðir are 788, 643 and 408 m a.s.l, respectively. Interpolation maps of palaeo‐ELAs demonstrate a positive relationship between palaeo‐ELA and distance to coastline. A positive relationship between palaeo‐ELA and latitude is observed on Vestfirðir, a negative relationship is observed on Tröllaskagi and no statistically significant relationship is present on the East Fjords. The modal orientation of cirques on Tröllaskagi and Vestfirðir is northeast, while orientation of cirques in the East Fjords is north. Palaeo‐wind reconstructions for the LGM show that modal aspect is aligned with the prevailing north‐northeast wind directions, although aspect measurements demonstrate wide dispersion. Cirque length is similar on Tröllaskagi and the East Fjords, but cirques are approximately 200 m shorter in Vestfirðir. Cirque widths are similar in all three regions. Comparisons with a global data set show that cirques in Iceland are smaller and more circular than cirques in other regions of the world. Similar to glaciers in Norway and Kamchatka, our results demonstrate that access to a moisture source is a key parameter in determining palaeo‐ELAs in Iceland. Temperatures interpreted from palaeo‐ELA depressions suggest that these cirques may have been glaciated as recently as the Little Ice Age.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Ipsen, Heather A.
Principato, Sarah M.
Grube, Rachael E.
Lee, Jessica F.
author_facet Ipsen, Heather A.
Principato, Sarah M.
Grube, Rachael E.
Lee, Jessica F.
author_sort Ipsen, Heather A.
title Spatial Analysis of Cirques from Three Regions of Iceland: Implications for Cirque Formation and Palaeoclimate
title_short Spatial Analysis of Cirques from Three Regions of Iceland: Implications for Cirque Formation and Palaeoclimate
title_full Spatial Analysis of Cirques from Three Regions of Iceland: Implications for Cirque Formation and Palaeoclimate
title_fullStr Spatial Analysis of Cirques from Three Regions of Iceland: Implications for Cirque Formation and Palaeoclimate
title_full_unstemmed Spatial Analysis of Cirques from Three Regions of Iceland: Implications for Cirque Formation and Palaeoclimate
title_sort spatial analysis of cirques from three regions of iceland: implications for cirque formation and palaeoclimate
publisher The Cupola: Scholarship at Gettysburg College
publishDate 2018
url https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/esfac/97
https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1102&context=esfac
long_lat ENVELOPE(9.642,9.642,63.170,63.170)
ENVELOPE(-22.500,-22.500,65.667,65.667)
geographic Ela
Norway
Vestfirðir
geographic_facet Ela
Norway
Vestfirðir
genre Iceland
Kamchatka
genre_facet Iceland
Kamchatka
op_source Environmental Studies Faculty Publications
op_relation https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/esfac/97
https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1102&context=esfac
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