4.4 Article

Can a dam type of an alpine lake be derived from lake geometry? A negative result

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOUNTAIN SCIENCE
Volume 18, Issue 3, Pages 614-621

Publisher

SCIENCE PRESS
DOI: 10.1007/s11629-020-6003-9

Keywords

Alpine lake; High mountain lake; GLOFs; Glacial lake; Moraine-dammed; Bedrock-dammed; Negative result; Cordillera Blanca

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Glacial lake outburst floods (GLOFs) are considered one of the most serious hazards in deglaciating high mountain regions worldwide, highlighting the need for GLOF hazard and risk assessment. Recent studies have attempted to assess GLOF hazard on a regional and national scale, but simplification may lead to neglect of qualitative characteristics. This study explores using quantitative characteristics and ratios to approximate lake dam types, but results show negligible differences in relative frequencies along the spectra.
Glacial lake outburst floods (GLOFs) represent one of the most serious hazard and risk in deglaciating high mountain regions worldwide and the need for GLOF hazard and risk assessment is apparent. As a consequence, numerous region- and nation-wide GLOF assessment studies have been published recently. These studies cover large areas and consider hundreds to thousands of lakes, prioritizing the hazard posed by them. Clearly, certain simplification is required for executing such studies, often resulting in neglecting qualitative characteristics which would need manual assignment. Different lake dam types (e.g., bedrock-dammed, moraine-dammed) are often not distinguished, despite they control GLOF mechanism (dam overtopping/dam breach) and thus GLOF magnitude. In this study, we explore the potential of easily measurable quantitative characteristics and four ratios to approximate the lake dam type. Our dataset of 851 lakes of the Cordillera Blanca suggests that while variances and means of these characteristics of individual lake types differ significantly (F-test, t-test), value distribution of different geometrical properties can't be used for the originally proposed purpose along the spectra. The only promising results are obtained for extreme values (selected bins) of the ratios. For instance, the low width to length ratio indicates likely moraine-dammed lake while the high value of ratio indicating round-shape of the lake indicates increased likelihood of bedrock-dammed lake. Overall, we report a negative result of our experiment since there are negligible differences of relative frequencies in most of the bins along the spectra.

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