Structure and evolution of the drainage system of a Himalayan debris-covered glacier, and its relationship with patterns of mass loss

Funding for Sarah Thompson as provided by the European Commission FP7-MC-IEF grant PIEF-GA-2012-330805, and for Lindsey Nicholson by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) Elise Richter Grant (V309-N26). Financial support for fieldwork in 2009 was provided by the University Centre in Svalbard and a Royal G...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Cryosphere
Main Authors: Benn, Douglas I., Thompson, Sarah, Gulley, Jason, Mertes, Jordan, Luckman, Adrian, Nicholson, Lindsey
Other Authors: University of St Andrews. School of Geography & Sustainable Development, University of St Andrews. Bell-Edwards Geographic Data Institute
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
DAS
BDC
GE
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10023/11733
https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-11-2247-2017
Description
Summary:Funding for Sarah Thompson as provided by the European Commission FP7-MC-IEF grant PIEF-GA-2012-330805, and for Lindsey Nicholson by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) Elise Richter Grant (V309-N26). Financial support for fieldwork in 2009 was provided by the University Centre in Svalbard and a Royal Geographical Society fieldwork grant to Sarah Thompson. TerraSAR-X data were kindly provided by the German Aerospace Center (DLR) under project HYD0178. The meteorological data were collected within the Ev-K2-CNR SHARE Project, funded by contributions from the Italian National Research Council and the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. We provide the first synoptic view of the drainage system of a Himalayan debris-covered glacier and its evolution through time, based on speleological exploration and satellite image analysis of Ngozumpa Glacier, Nepal. The drainage system has several linked components: 1) a seasonal subglacial drainage system below the upper ablation zone; 2) supraglacial channels allowing efficient meltwater transport across parts of the upper ablation zone; 3) sub-marginal channels, allowing long-distance transport of meltwater; 4) perched ponds, which intermittently store meltwater prior to evacuation via the englacial drainage system; 5) englacial cut-and-closure conduits, which may undergo repeated cycles of abandonment and reactivation; 6) a 'base-level' lake system (Spillway Lake) dammed behind the terminal moraine. The distribution and relative importance of these elements has evolved through time, in response to sustained negative mass balance. The area occupied by perched ponds has expanded upglacier at the expense of supraglacial channels, and Spillway Lake has grown as more of the glacier surface ablates to base level. Subsurface processes play a governing role in creating, maintaining and shutting down exposures of ice at the glacier surface, with a major impact on spatial patterns and rates of surface mass loss. Comparison of our results with observations on other glaciers indicate ...