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Quantifying ice cliff evolution with multi-temporal point clouds on the debris-covered Khumbu Glacier, Nepal

Authors :
C. SCOTT WATSON
DUNCAN J. QUINCEY
MARK W. SMITH
JONATHAN L. CARRIVICK
ANN V. ROWAN
MIKE R. JAMES
Source :
Journal of Glaciology, Vol 63, Pp 823-837 (2017)
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press, 2017.

Abstract

Measurements of glacier ice cliff evolution are sparse, but where they do exist, they indicate that such areas of exposed ice contribute a disproportionate amount of melt to the glacier ablation budget. We used Structure from Motion photogrammetry with Multi-View Stereo to derive 3-D point clouds for nine ice cliffs on Khumbu Glacier, Nepal (in November 2015, May 2016 and October 2016). By differencing these clouds, we could quantify the magnitude, seasonality and spatial variability of ice cliff retreat. Mean retreat rates of 0.30–1.49 cm d−1 were observed during the winter interval (November 2015–May 2016) and 0.74–5.18 cm d−1 were observed during the summer (May 2016–October 2016). Four ice cliffs, which all featured supraglacial ponds, persisted over the full study period. In contrast, ice cliffs without a pond or with a steep back-slope degraded over the same period. The rate of thermo-erosional undercutting was over double that of subaerial retreat. Overall, 3-D topographic differencing allowed an improved process-based understanding of cliff evolution and cliff-pond coupling, which will become increasingly important for monitoring and modelling the evolution of thinning debris-covered glaciers.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00221430 and 17275652
Volume :
63
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of Glaciology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.6dffd3599cff4e06b861297d7c24d0a3
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/jog.2017.47