4.5 Article

The Role of Differential Ablation and Dynamic Detachment in Driving Accelerating Mass Loss From a Debris-Covered Himalayan Glacier

Journal

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2020JF005761

Keywords

glacier model; mass balance; mountain glacier; glacier dynamics; Himalaya; Everest region

Funding

  1. EverDrill Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) Grant [NE/P00265X]
  2. Aberystwyth University [NE/P002021]
  3. AberDoc PhD studentship
  4. NERC ACCE DTP studentship [NE/L002450/1]

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The sustained mass loss from Himalayan glaciers is causing expansion and thickening of supraglacial debris, but this thicker debris is not suppressing ablation as expected. This rapid mass loss is attributed to various factors, including differential ablation processes and decrease in ice flux. Investigating the dynamic detachment of the upper active glacier from the heavily debris-covered tongue provides a better representation of glacier behavior, indicating that Khumbu Glacier has passed a dynamic tipping point.
Sustained mass loss from Himalayan glaciers is causing supraglacial debris to expand and thicken, with the expectation that thicker debris will suppress ablation and extend glacier longevity. However, debris-covered glaciers are losing mass at similar rates to clean-ice glaciers in High Mountain Asia. This rapid mass loss is attributed to the combined effects of; (a) low or reversed mass balance gradients across debris-covered glacier tongues, (b) differential ablation processes that locally enhance ablation within the debris-covered section of the glacier, for example, at ice cliffs and supraglacial ponds, and (c) a decrease in ice flux from the accumulation area in response to climatic warming. Adding meter-scale spatial variations in supraglacial debris thickness to an ice-flow model of Khumbu Glacier, Nepal, increased mass loss by 47% relative to simulations assuming a continuous debris layer over a 31-year period (1984-2015 CE) but overestimated the reduction in ice flux. Therefore, we investigated if simulating the effects of dynamic detachment of the upper active glacier from the debris-covered tongue would give a better representation of glacier behavior, as suggested by observations of change in glacier dynamics and structure indicating that this process occurred during the last 100 years. Observed glacier change was reproduced more reliably in simulations of the active, rather than entire, glacier extent, indicating that Khumbu Glacier has passed a dynamic tipping point by dynamically detaching from the heavily debris-covered tongue that contains 20% of the former ice volume.

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