BRIKSDALSBREEN, WESTERN NORWAY - CLIMATIC EFFECTS ON THE TERMINAL RESPONSE OF A TEMPERATE GLACIER BETWEEN AD 1901 AND 1994

Annual measurements of the frontal variations of Briksdalsbreen are compared with twentieth-century records of summer temperature, winter precipitation and mass budget to evaluate the effects of climatic change on the glacier fluctuations. Frontal variations are shown to be determined by both summer...

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Main Authors: NESJE, A, JOHANNESSEN, T, BIRKS, HJB
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: EDWARD ARNOLD PUBL LTD 1995
Subjects:
Online Access:http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/166990/
id ftucl:oai:eprints.ucl.ac.uk.OAI2:166990
record_format openpolar
spelling ftucl:oai:eprints.ucl.ac.uk.OAI2:166990 2023-05-15T16:21:50+02:00 BRIKSDALSBREEN, WESTERN NORWAY - CLIMATIC EFFECTS ON THE TERMINAL RESPONSE OF A TEMPERATE GLACIER BETWEEN AD 1901 AND 1994 NESJE, A JOHANNESSEN, T BIRKS, HJB 1995 http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/166990/ unknown EDWARD ARNOLD PUBL LTD HOLOCENE , 5 (3) 343 - 347. (1995) CLIMATE CHANGE MASS BALANCE GLACIERS FRONTAL TIME LAG BRIKSDALSBREEN WESTERN NORWAY 20TH-CENTURY SOUTHERN-NORWAY Article 1995 ftucl 2016-01-21T23:20:32Z Annual measurements of the frontal variations of Briksdalsbreen are compared with twentieth-century records of summer temperature, winter precipitation and mass budget to evaluate the effects of climatic change on the glacier fluctuations. Frontal variations are shown to be determined by both summer temperature and winter precipitation. Between AD 1901 and 1931 the glacier front was in a more-or-less stable position. Warm summers in the 1930s and 1940s caused a significant retreat of the glacier, reaching a maximum rate of annual retreat of 84 m in 1948. Cooler summers in the late 1940s led to a stabilization of the glacier front from 1952. Between 1987/88 and 1993/94 the terminus advanced 231 m, 155 m of which has occurred after 1992. The increased glacier net mass balance in western Norway after the 1988/89 season resulted in the largest annual glacier advances measured this century at Briksdalsbreen (75 and 80 m in 1992/93 and 1993/94, respectively). Present knowledge about glacier history in western Norway since the termination of the last glaciation about 9000 years ago suggests that annual glacier expansions of such magnitude only occurred during the 'Little Ice Age' (c. AD 1650-1920). The lag time of frontal response of Briksdalsbreen to a change in annual net balance has been calculated to be 3-4 years, which confirms that glacier termini can react rapidly to short-term climatic changes. Article in Journal/Newspaper glacier University College London: UCL Discovery Norway
institution Open Polar
collection University College London: UCL Discovery
op_collection_id ftucl
language unknown
topic CLIMATE CHANGE
MASS BALANCE
GLACIERS
FRONTAL TIME LAG
BRIKSDALSBREEN
WESTERN NORWAY
20TH-CENTURY
SOUTHERN-NORWAY
spellingShingle CLIMATE CHANGE
MASS BALANCE
GLACIERS
FRONTAL TIME LAG
BRIKSDALSBREEN
WESTERN NORWAY
20TH-CENTURY
SOUTHERN-NORWAY
NESJE, A
JOHANNESSEN, T
BIRKS, HJB
BRIKSDALSBREEN, WESTERN NORWAY - CLIMATIC EFFECTS ON THE TERMINAL RESPONSE OF A TEMPERATE GLACIER BETWEEN AD 1901 AND 1994
topic_facet CLIMATE CHANGE
MASS BALANCE
GLACIERS
FRONTAL TIME LAG
BRIKSDALSBREEN
WESTERN NORWAY
20TH-CENTURY
SOUTHERN-NORWAY
description Annual measurements of the frontal variations of Briksdalsbreen are compared with twentieth-century records of summer temperature, winter precipitation and mass budget to evaluate the effects of climatic change on the glacier fluctuations. Frontal variations are shown to be determined by both summer temperature and winter precipitation. Between AD 1901 and 1931 the glacier front was in a more-or-less stable position. Warm summers in the 1930s and 1940s caused a significant retreat of the glacier, reaching a maximum rate of annual retreat of 84 m in 1948. Cooler summers in the late 1940s led to a stabilization of the glacier front from 1952. Between 1987/88 and 1993/94 the terminus advanced 231 m, 155 m of which has occurred after 1992. The increased glacier net mass balance in western Norway after the 1988/89 season resulted in the largest annual glacier advances measured this century at Briksdalsbreen (75 and 80 m in 1992/93 and 1993/94, respectively). Present knowledge about glacier history in western Norway since the termination of the last glaciation about 9000 years ago suggests that annual glacier expansions of such magnitude only occurred during the 'Little Ice Age' (c. AD 1650-1920). The lag time of frontal response of Briksdalsbreen to a change in annual net balance has been calculated to be 3-4 years, which confirms that glacier termini can react rapidly to short-term climatic changes.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author NESJE, A
JOHANNESSEN, T
BIRKS, HJB
author_facet NESJE, A
JOHANNESSEN, T
BIRKS, HJB
author_sort NESJE, A
title BRIKSDALSBREEN, WESTERN NORWAY - CLIMATIC EFFECTS ON THE TERMINAL RESPONSE OF A TEMPERATE GLACIER BETWEEN AD 1901 AND 1994
title_short BRIKSDALSBREEN, WESTERN NORWAY - CLIMATIC EFFECTS ON THE TERMINAL RESPONSE OF A TEMPERATE GLACIER BETWEEN AD 1901 AND 1994
title_full BRIKSDALSBREEN, WESTERN NORWAY - CLIMATIC EFFECTS ON THE TERMINAL RESPONSE OF A TEMPERATE GLACIER BETWEEN AD 1901 AND 1994
title_fullStr BRIKSDALSBREEN, WESTERN NORWAY - CLIMATIC EFFECTS ON THE TERMINAL RESPONSE OF A TEMPERATE GLACIER BETWEEN AD 1901 AND 1994
title_full_unstemmed BRIKSDALSBREEN, WESTERN NORWAY - CLIMATIC EFFECTS ON THE TERMINAL RESPONSE OF A TEMPERATE GLACIER BETWEEN AD 1901 AND 1994
title_sort briksdalsbreen, western norway - climatic effects on the terminal response of a temperate glacier between ad 1901 and 1994
publisher EDWARD ARNOLD PUBL LTD
publishDate 1995
url http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/166990/
geographic Norway
geographic_facet Norway
genre glacier
genre_facet glacier
op_source HOLOCENE , 5 (3) 343 - 347. (1995)
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