4.6 Article

Triggers for multiple glacier detachments from a low-angle valley glacier in the Amney Machen Range, eastern Tibetan Plateau

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GEOMORPHOLOGY
卷 440, 期 -, 页码 -

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DOI: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2023.108867

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Ice avalanche; Glacier detachment; Climate change; Tibetan plateau

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This study re-evaluates the repeat glacier detachments of a low angle surging valley glacier in the Amney Machen Range in the eastern Tibetan Plateau. By analyzing satellite images, terrain profiles, and field data, the study describes in detail four glacier detachments that occurred over a 15-year period. The factors contributing to glacier detachments include anomalous warming, subglacial hydrology, repeated glacier surging, a soft glacier bed, and ice-rock loading from the glacier headwall. However, the relative influence of each factor varies in different events. Ice-rock debris loadings from the headwall are found to be the most important factor. Some events may have been influenced by short-term climate anomalies, while the role of climate warming in initiating glacier detachments is limited.
Large-scale ice avalanches initiated from low-angle glaciers (also known as glacier detachment) remain a scarcely studied and poorly understood phenomenon. Here we re-evaluated the repeat glacier detachments of a low angle (-14 degrees) surging valley glacier in the Amney Machen Range, eastern Tibetan Plateau. Four glacier detachments recorded over a 15-year period (2004-2019) are described in detail based on the combination of satellite image analyses, additional terrain profile analyses and field data. To identify what triggered these high magnitude events, the glacier fluctuations, seismicity, lithology, and regional climate were examined. We find that the factors favouring glacier detachments were anomalous warming, subglacial hydrology, repeated glacier surging, a soft glacier bed, and ice-rock loading from the glacier headwall, though the relative influence of each factor varied in the four events we studied. We confirmed the observation of Paul (2019) that additional ice-rock debris loadings from the headwall were the most important factor for all events. The 2004 event probably was a delayed response to ice-rock loading during the preceding months. The latter three events may have been affected by short-term climate anomalies. The events of 2007 and 2016 were associated with anomalously high temperature: abrupt warming preceded the 2007 event and 2016 was the warmest year on record. The 2019 event followed sustained precipitation and high summer temperatures. Based on the spatial patterns in glacier change, we suggest that climate warming played a limited role in initiation.

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