4.3 Article

Recent hydrologic change in a Colorado alpine basin: an indicator of permafrost thaw?

Journal

ANNALS OF GLACIOLOGY
Volume 51, Issue 56, Pages 130-134

Publisher

INT GLACIOL SOC
DOI: 10.3189/172756411795932074

Keywords

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Funding

  1. US National Science Foundation [DEB-0423662]
  2. Boulder Creek Critical Zone Observatory [NSF-0724960]

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Hydrologic and hydrochemical studies have been conducted in Green Lakes Valley, Colorado Front Range, USA, above 3550 m since 1982. They show a classic seasonal hydrograph dominated by snowmelt and an earlier date for the start of spring flow and for peak flow over the period of record. This is consistent with patterns found at lower elevations in Colorado and throughout western North America. They also show an increasing trend in flows in September and October of 2.6 +/- 0.7 mm a(-1) which is not found elsewhere and cannot be accounted for by increased autumn precipitation and the melting of surface ice. Because this late-season increase is not found at the highest elevations or in basins in which there is no evidence of permafrost, it seems best explained by the thawing of alpine permafrost at intermediate elevations. This is corroborated by an increase in the concentration of base cations and silica, and particularly in Ca(2+) and SO(4)(-), in the stream discharge starting in 2000. As with the physical hydrology, the geochemical signals have not been detected at the higher elevations in the basin, though they have previously been associated with streamflow from a small rock glacier in the valley. The combined evidence suggests the degradation of ice-rich permafrost on the north-facing slopes of the valley below 3700 m, where it has been detected at 3 m depth by geophysical surveys.

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