Abstract

AbstractPhotogrammetric reconstructions of the Aldegondabreen glacier on Svalbard from 17 archival terrestrial oblique photographs taken in 1910 and 1911 reveal a past volume of 1373.7 ± 78.2 · 106 m3; almost five times greater than its volume in 2016. Comparisons to elevation data obtained from aerial and satellite imagery indicate a relatively unchanging volume loss rate of − 10.1 ± 1.6 · 106 m3 a−1 over the entire study period, while the rate of elevation change is increasing. At this rate of volume loss, the glacier may be almost non-existent within 30 years. If the changes of Aldegondabreen are regionally representative, it suggests that there was considerable ice loss over the entire 1900s for the low elevation glaciers of western Svalbard. The 1910/11 reconstruction was made from a few of the tens of thousands of archival terrestrial photographs from the early 1900s that cover most of Svalbard. Further analysis of this material would give insight into the recent history and future prospects of the archipelago's glaciers. Photogrammetric reconstructions of this kind of material require extensive manual processing to produce good results; for more extensive use of these archival imagery, a better processing workflow would be required.

Highlights

  • Svalbard glacier mass loss has been considerable since the beginning of the 1900s (Nuth and others, 2007; Möller and Kohler, 2018)

  • The aim of the study was to evaluate the possibility of using historic archival photographs on Svalbard to reconstruct the past shape and size of its glaciers

  • There was an acceleration in the rate of elevation change, most likely due to the concurrently warming air temperatures

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Summary

Introduction

Svalbard glacier mass loss has been considerable since the beginning of the 1900s (Nuth and others, 2007; Möller and Kohler, 2018). Inventories of glacier extents and area on Svalbard show a 13% decrease in ice cover since the end of the Little Ice Age (LIA; Martín-Moreno and others, 2017), a cold period spanning a few hundred years (Mann and others, 2009). The end of this cold period on Svalbard featured overall glacier retreat, but the timing of this event is still unclear, as the lack of data inhibits a clear picture. The total Svalbard glacier area has decreased by 7% over the last 30 years, indicating an accelerating retreat rate (Nuth and others, 2013)

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