Ice-cored moraine degradation mapped and quantified using an unmanned aerial vehicle: a case study from a polythermal glacier in Svalbard

Ice-cored lateral-frontal moraines are common at the margins of receding high-Arctic valley glaciers, but the preservation potential of these features within the landform record is unclear. Recent climatic amelioration provides an opportunity to study the morphological evolution of these landforms a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Toby N. Tonkin, Nicholas G. Midgely, Simon J. Cook, David Graham
Format: Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Ice-cored_moraine_degradation_mapped_and_quantified_using_an_unmanned_aerial_vehicle_a_case_study_from_a_polythermal_glacier_in_Svalbard/9481043
id ftloughboroughun:oai:figshare.com:article/9481043
record_format openpolar
spelling ftloughboroughun:oai:figshare.com:article/9481043 2023-05-15T15:01:50+02:00 Ice-cored moraine degradation mapped and quantified using an unmanned aerial vehicle: a case study from a polythermal glacier in Svalbard Toby N. Tonkin Nicholas G. Midgely Simon J. Cook David Graham 2016-01-01T00:00:00Z https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Ice-cored_moraine_degradation_mapped_and_quantified_using_an_unmanned_aerial_vehicle_a_case_study_from_a_polythermal_glacier_in_Svalbard/9481043 unknown 2134/20069 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Ice-cored_moraine_degradation_mapped_and_quantified_using_an_unmanned_aerial_vehicle_a_case_study_from_a_polythermal_glacier_in_Svalbard/9481043 CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 CC-BY-NC-ND Geology Earth Sciences not elsewhere classified Structure-from-motion Deglaciation Geomorphologic change detection Austre Lovénbreen Text Journal contribution 2016 ftloughboroughun 2022-01-01T20:16:06Z Ice-cored lateral-frontal moraines are common at the margins of receding high-Arctic valley glaciers, but the preservation potential of these features within the landform record is unclear. Recent climatic amelioration provides an opportunity to study the morphological evolution of these landforms as they de-ice. This is important because high-Arctic glacial landsystems have been used as analogues for formerly glaciated areas in the mid-latitudes. This study uses SfM (Structure-from-Motion) photogrammetry and a combination of archive aerial and UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle) derived imagery to investigate the degradation of an ice-cored lateral-frontal moraine at Austre Lovénbreen, Svalbard. Across the study area as a whole, over an 11-year period, the average depth of surface lowering was -1.75 ± 0.89 m. The frontal sections of the moraine showed low or undetectable rates of change. Spatially variable rates of surface lowering are associated with differences in the quantity of buried-ice within the structure of the moraine. Morphological change was dominated by surface lowering, with limited field evidence of degradation via back-wastage. This is affording the moraine a greater degree of stability than observed at many other sites in Svalbard, although it is unclear whether the end point will be a fully stabilised ice-cored moraine, in equilibrium with its environment, or an ice-free lateral-frontal moraine complex. Controls on geomorphological change (e.g. topography and climate) and the preservation potential of the lateral-frontal moraine are discussed. The methods used by this research also demonstrate the potential value of SfM photogrammetry and unmanned aerial vehicles for monitoring environmental change and are likely to have wider applications in other geoscientific sub-disciplines. Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper Arctic glacier Svalbard Loughborough University: Figshare Arctic Svalbard
institution Open Polar
collection Loughborough University: Figshare
op_collection_id ftloughboroughun
language unknown
topic Geology
Earth Sciences not elsewhere classified
Structure-from-motion
Deglaciation
Geomorphologic change detection
Austre Lovénbreen
spellingShingle Geology
Earth Sciences not elsewhere classified
Structure-from-motion
Deglaciation
Geomorphologic change detection
Austre Lovénbreen
Toby N. Tonkin
Nicholas G. Midgely
Simon J. Cook
David Graham
Ice-cored moraine degradation mapped and quantified using an unmanned aerial vehicle: a case study from a polythermal glacier in Svalbard
topic_facet Geology
Earth Sciences not elsewhere classified
Structure-from-motion
Deglaciation
Geomorphologic change detection
Austre Lovénbreen
description Ice-cored lateral-frontal moraines are common at the margins of receding high-Arctic valley glaciers, but the preservation potential of these features within the landform record is unclear. Recent climatic amelioration provides an opportunity to study the morphological evolution of these landforms as they de-ice. This is important because high-Arctic glacial landsystems have been used as analogues for formerly glaciated areas in the mid-latitudes. This study uses SfM (Structure-from-Motion) photogrammetry and a combination of archive aerial and UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle) derived imagery to investigate the degradation of an ice-cored lateral-frontal moraine at Austre Lovénbreen, Svalbard. Across the study area as a whole, over an 11-year period, the average depth of surface lowering was -1.75 ± 0.89 m. The frontal sections of the moraine showed low or undetectable rates of change. Spatially variable rates of surface lowering are associated with differences in the quantity of buried-ice within the structure of the moraine. Morphological change was dominated by surface lowering, with limited field evidence of degradation via back-wastage. This is affording the moraine a greater degree of stability than observed at many other sites in Svalbard, although it is unclear whether the end point will be a fully stabilised ice-cored moraine, in equilibrium with its environment, or an ice-free lateral-frontal moraine complex. Controls on geomorphological change (e.g. topography and climate) and the preservation potential of the lateral-frontal moraine are discussed. The methods used by this research also demonstrate the potential value of SfM photogrammetry and unmanned aerial vehicles for monitoring environmental change and are likely to have wider applications in other geoscientific sub-disciplines.
format Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper
author Toby N. Tonkin
Nicholas G. Midgely
Simon J. Cook
David Graham
author_facet Toby N. Tonkin
Nicholas G. Midgely
Simon J. Cook
David Graham
author_sort Toby N. Tonkin
title Ice-cored moraine degradation mapped and quantified using an unmanned aerial vehicle: a case study from a polythermal glacier in Svalbard
title_short Ice-cored moraine degradation mapped and quantified using an unmanned aerial vehicle: a case study from a polythermal glacier in Svalbard
title_full Ice-cored moraine degradation mapped and quantified using an unmanned aerial vehicle: a case study from a polythermal glacier in Svalbard
title_fullStr Ice-cored moraine degradation mapped and quantified using an unmanned aerial vehicle: a case study from a polythermal glacier in Svalbard
title_full_unstemmed Ice-cored moraine degradation mapped and quantified using an unmanned aerial vehicle: a case study from a polythermal glacier in Svalbard
title_sort ice-cored moraine degradation mapped and quantified using an unmanned aerial vehicle: a case study from a polythermal glacier in svalbard
publishDate 2016
url https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Ice-cored_moraine_degradation_mapped_and_quantified_using_an_unmanned_aerial_vehicle_a_case_study_from_a_polythermal_glacier_in_Svalbard/9481043
geographic Arctic
Svalbard
geographic_facet Arctic
Svalbard
genre Arctic
glacier
Svalbard
genre_facet Arctic
glacier
Svalbard
op_relation 2134/20069
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Ice-cored_moraine_degradation_mapped_and_quantified_using_an_unmanned_aerial_vehicle_a_case_study_from_a_polythermal_glacier_in_Svalbard/9481043
op_rights CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC-ND
_version_ 1766333840548167680