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A new inventory of High Mountain Asia surging glaciers derived from multiple elevation datasets since the 1970s.

Authors :
Guo, Lei
Li, Jia
Dehecq, Amaury
Li, Zhiwei
Li, Xin
Zhu, Jianjun
Source :
Earth System Science Data. 2023, Vol. 15 Issue 7, p2841-2861. 21p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Glacier surging is an unusual instability of ice flow, and inventories of surging glaciers are important for regional glacier mass balance studies and glacier dynamic studies. Glacier surges in High Mountain Asia (HMA) have been widely reported. However, the completeness of available inventories of HMA surging glaciers is hampered by the insufficient spatial and temporal coverage of glacier change observations or by the limitations of the identification methods. In this study, we established a new inventory of HMA surging glaciers based on glacier surface elevation changes and morphological changes over 4 decades. Three elevation change datasets based on four elevation sources (the KH-9 DEM, NASA DEM, COP30 DEM, and HMA DEM) and long-term Landsat satellite image series were utilized to assess the presence of typical surge features over two time periods (1970sā€“2000 and 2000ā€“2020). A total of 890 surging and 336 probably or possibly surging glaciers were identified in HMA. Compared to the most recent inventory of surging glaciers in HMA, our inventory incorporated 253 previously unidentified surging glaciers. The number and area of surging glaciers accounted for āˆ¼2.49 % (excluding glaciers smaller than 0.4 km 2) and āˆ¼16.59 % of the total glacier number and glacier area in HMA, respectively. Glacier surges were found in 21 of the 22 subregions of HMA (except for the Dzhungarsky Alatau); however, the density of surging glaciers is highly uneven. Glacier surges occur frequently in the northwestern subregions (e.g., Pamir and Karakoram) but less often in the peripheral subregions. The inventory further shows that surge activity is more likely to occur for glaciers with a larger area, longer length, and wider elevation range. Among glaciers with similar areas, the surging ones usually have steeper slopes than non-surging ones. The inventory and elevation change products of identified surging glaciers are available at 10.5281/zenodo.7961207 (Guo et al., 2023). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18663508
Volume :
15
Issue :
7
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Earth System Science Data
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
169809781
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-15-2841-2023