Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dr.iiserpune.ac.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/7366
Title: Modelling Debris-Covered Glacier Ablation Using the Simultaneous Heat and Water Transport Model. Part 1: Model Development and Application to North Changri Nup
Authors: Winter-Billington, Alex
Dadic, Ruzica
Moore, R. D.
Flerchinger, Gerald
Wagnon, Patrick
BANERJEE, ARGHA
Dept. of Earth and Climate Science
Keywords: Glacier
Debris
Ablation
Model
SHAW
Physically based
Changri Nup
2022-SEP-WEEK1
TOC-SEP-2022
2022
Issue Date: Aug-2022
Publisher: Frontiers Media S.A.
Citation: Frontiers in Earth Science, 10.
Abstract: Modelling ablation of glacier ice under a layer of mineral debris is increasingly important, because the extent of supraglacial debris is expanding worldwide due to glacier recession. Physically based models have been developed, but the uncertainty in predictions is not yet well constrained. A new one-dimensional model of debris-covered ice ablation that is based on the Simultaneous Heat and Water transfer model is introduced here. SHAW-Glacier is a physically based, vertically integrated, fully coupled, water and energy balance model, which includes the advection of heat by rainwater and lateral flow. SHAW-Glacier was applied to North Changri Nup, a high elevation alpine glacier in the monsoon-dominated Central Himalaya. Simulations were compared with observed debris temperature profiles, snow depth, and ablation stake measurements for debris 0.03–0.41 m thick, in a 2500 m2 study area. Prediction uncertainty was estimated in a Monte Carlo analysis. SHAW-Glacier simulated the characteristic pattern of decreasing ablation with increasing debris thickness. However, the observations of ablation did not follow the characteristic pattern; annual ablation was highest where the debris was thickest. Recursive partitioning revealed a substantial, non-linear sensitivity to the snow threshold air temperature, suggesting a sensitivity to the duration of snow cover. Photographs showed patches of snow persisting through the ablation season, and the observational data were consistent with uneven persistence of snow patches. The analyses indicate that patchy snow cover in the ablation season can overwhelm the sensitivity of sub-debris ablation to debris thickness. Patchy snow cover may be an unquantified source of uncertainty in predictions of sub-debris ablation.
URI: https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2022.796877
http://dr.iiserpune.ac.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/7366
ISSN: 2296-6463
Appears in Collections:JOURNAL ARTICLES

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