Status and evolution of the cryosphere in the Andes of Santiago (Chile, 33.5°S.)

International audience In the context of a general retreat of glaciers in the dry Andes, this study focuses on the state and recent evolution of debris-covered glaciers and permafrost-related landforms, especially rock glaciers, in the semiarid to semihumid Laguna Negra catchment, a part of the Ande...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bodin, Xavier, Rojas, F., Brenning, A.
Other Authors: Instituto de Geografia, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile (UC), Department of Geography and Environmental Management Waterloo, University of Waterloo Waterloo
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: HAL CCSD 2010
Subjects:
geo
Online Access:https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/halsde-00574550
Description
Summary:International audience In the context of a general retreat of glaciers in the dry Andes, this study focuses on the state and recent evolution of debris-covered glaciers and permafrost-related landforms, especially rock glaciers, in the semiarid to semihumid Laguna Negra catchment, a part of the Andes of central Chile at 33.5°S, that is a key contributor of drinking water for the city of Santiago. We conducted catchment-scale geomorphological mapping, diachronic analysis of 1955 and 1996 orthophotographs and digital elevation models (DEMs), and the analysis of ground temperatures and their sensitivity to climate variation. Rock glaciers dominate spatially and in terms of water storage over glaciers (area ratio: 1.7:1; ratio of water equivalents: 1.5:1). An intense downwasting has affected both debris-covered and exposed glacier components in the Punta Negra subcatchment, a process that is associated with the growth of numerous thermokarst depressions. The altitudinal transect of ground temperature suggest that permafrost is widespread above ∼4000 m asl, although it can also occur at lower elevations on sheltered footslopes and within rock glaciers. The sensitivity analysis indicates that the near-surface ground thermal regime at high altitudes is strongly influenced by the snow cover disappearance date, which may therefore constitute an important control on the effect of climatic warming.