Pursuit of Optimal Design for Winter-Balance Surveys of Valley-Glacier Ablation Areas

Efficient collection of snow depth and density data is important in field surveys used to estimate the winter surface mass balance of glaciers. Simultaneously extensive, high resolution, and accurate snow-depth measurements can be difficult to obtain, so optimisation of measurement configuration and...

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Main Authors: Pulwicki, Alexandra, Flowers, Gwenn E., Bingham, Derek
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://summit.sfu.ca/item/18899
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spelling ftsimonfu:oai:summit.sfu.ca:18899 2023-05-15T16:22:28+02:00 Pursuit of Optimal Design for Winter-Balance Surveys of Valley-Glacier Ablation Areas Pulwicki, Alexandra Flowers, Gwenn E. Bingham, Derek 2019-08-06 http://summit.sfu.ca/item/18899 English eng http://summit.sfu.ca/item/18899 Article 2019 ftsimonfu 2022-04-07T18:42:15Z Efficient collection of snow depth and density data is important in field surveys used to estimate the winter surface mass balance of glaciers. Simultaneously extensive, high resolution, and accurate snow-depth measurements can be difficult to obtain, so optimisation of measurement configuration and spacing is valuable in any survey design. Using in-situ data from the ablation areas of three glaciers in the St. Elias Mountains of Yukon, Canada, we consider six possible survey designs for snow-depth sampling and N = 6–200+ sampling locations per glacier. For each design and number of sampling locations, we use a linear regression on topographic parameters to estimate winter balance at unsampled locations and compare these estimates with known values. Average errors decrease sharply with increasing sample size up to N ≈ 10–15, but reliable error reduction for any given sampling scheme requires significantly higher N. Lower errors are often, but not always, associated with sampling schemes that employ quasi-regular spacing. With both real- and synthetic data, the common centreline survey produces the poorest results overall. The optimal design often requires sampling near the glacier margin, even at low N. The unconventional “hourglass” design performed best of all designs tested when evaluated against known values of winter balance. Article in Journal/Newspaper glacier* Yukon Summit - SFU Research Repository (Simon Fraser University) Yukon Canada
institution Open Polar
collection Summit - SFU Research Repository (Simon Fraser University)
op_collection_id ftsimonfu
language English
description Efficient collection of snow depth and density data is important in field surveys used to estimate the winter surface mass balance of glaciers. Simultaneously extensive, high resolution, and accurate snow-depth measurements can be difficult to obtain, so optimisation of measurement configuration and spacing is valuable in any survey design. Using in-situ data from the ablation areas of three glaciers in the St. Elias Mountains of Yukon, Canada, we consider six possible survey designs for snow-depth sampling and N = 6–200+ sampling locations per glacier. For each design and number of sampling locations, we use a linear regression on topographic parameters to estimate winter balance at unsampled locations and compare these estimates with known values. Average errors decrease sharply with increasing sample size up to N ≈ 10–15, but reliable error reduction for any given sampling scheme requires significantly higher N. Lower errors are often, but not always, associated with sampling schemes that employ quasi-regular spacing. With both real- and synthetic data, the common centreline survey produces the poorest results overall. The optimal design often requires sampling near the glacier margin, even at low N. The unconventional “hourglass” design performed best of all designs tested when evaluated against known values of winter balance.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Pulwicki, Alexandra
Flowers, Gwenn E.
Bingham, Derek
spellingShingle Pulwicki, Alexandra
Flowers, Gwenn E.
Bingham, Derek
Pursuit of Optimal Design for Winter-Balance Surveys of Valley-Glacier Ablation Areas
author_facet Pulwicki, Alexandra
Flowers, Gwenn E.
Bingham, Derek
author_sort Pulwicki, Alexandra
title Pursuit of Optimal Design for Winter-Balance Surveys of Valley-Glacier Ablation Areas
title_short Pursuit of Optimal Design for Winter-Balance Surveys of Valley-Glacier Ablation Areas
title_full Pursuit of Optimal Design for Winter-Balance Surveys of Valley-Glacier Ablation Areas
title_fullStr Pursuit of Optimal Design for Winter-Balance Surveys of Valley-Glacier Ablation Areas
title_full_unstemmed Pursuit of Optimal Design for Winter-Balance Surveys of Valley-Glacier Ablation Areas
title_sort pursuit of optimal design for winter-balance surveys of valley-glacier ablation areas
publishDate 2019
url http://summit.sfu.ca/item/18899
geographic Yukon
Canada
geographic_facet Yukon
Canada
genre glacier*
Yukon
genre_facet glacier*
Yukon
op_relation http://summit.sfu.ca/item/18899
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