Abstract

Abstract. Rapid growth of proglacial lakes in the current warming climate can pose significant outburst flood hazards, increase rates of ice mass loss, and alter the dynamic state of glaciers. We studied the nature and rate of proglacial lake evolution at Pasterze Glacier (Austria) in the period 1998–2019 using different remote-sensing (photogrammetry, laser scanning) and fieldwork-based (global navigation satellite system – GNSS, time-lapse photography, geoelectrical resistivity tomography – ERT, and bathymetry) data. Glacier thinning below the spillway level and glacier recession caused flooding of the glacier, initially forming a glacier-lateral to supraglacial lake with subaerial and subaquatic debris-covered dead-ice bodies. The observed lake size increase in 1998–2019 followed an exponential curve (1998 – 1900 m2, 2019 – 304 000 m2). ERT data from 2015 to 2019 revealed widespread existence of massive dead-ice bodies exceeding 25 m in thickness near the lake shore. Several large-scale and rapidly occurring buoyant calving events were detected in the 48 m deep basin by time-lapse photography, indicating that buoyant calving is a crucial process for the fast lake expansion. Estimations of the ice volume losses by buoyant calving and by subaerial ablation at a 0.35 km2 large lake-proximal section of the glacier reveal comparable values for both processes (ca. 1×106 m3) for the period August 2018 to August 2019. We identified a sequence of processes: glacier recession into a basin and glacier thinning below the spillway level; glacio-fluvial sedimentation in the glacial–proglacial transition zone covering dead ice; initial formation and accelerating enlargement of a glacier-lateral to supraglacial lake by ablation of glacier ice and debris-covered dead ice forming thermokarst features; increase in hydrostatic disequilibrium leading to destabilization of ice at the lake bottom or at the near-shore causing fracturing, tilting, disintegration, or emergence of new icebergs due to buoyant calving; and gradual melting of icebergs along with iceberg capsizing events. We conclude that buoyant calving, previously not reported from the European Alps, might play an important role at alpine glaciers in the future as many glaciers are expected to recede into valley or cirque overdeepenings.

Highlights

  • Ongoing recession of mountain glaciers worldwide reveals dynamic landscapes exposed to high rates of geomorphological and hydrological changes (Carrivick and Heckmann, 2017)

  • High annual longitudinal backwasting rates were measured in most years when the glacier was in the basin

  • We identified the following sequence of processes at Pasterze Glacier: (a) glacier recession into an overdeepened basin and glacier thinning below the spillway level; (b) glacio-fluvial sedimentation in the glacial– proglacial transition zone covering dead ice; (c) initial formation and accelerating enlargement of a glacier-lateral to supraglacial lake by ablation of glacier ice and debriscovered dead ice forming thermokarst features; (d) increase in hydrostatic disequilibrium leading to general glacier ice instability; (e) destabilization of debris-buried ice at the lake shore expressed by fracturing, tilting, and disintegration due to buoyancy; (f) emergence of new icebergs due to buoyant calving; and (g) gradual melting of icebergs along with iceberg capsizing events

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Summary

Introduction

Ongoing recession of mountain glaciers worldwide reveals dynamic landscapes exposed to high rates of geomorphological and hydrological changes (Carrivick and Heckmann, 2017). Proglacial lakes may form, including ice-contact lakes (physically attached to an ice margin) and ice-marginal lakes (lakes detached from or immediately beyond a contemporary ice margin) (Benn and Evans, 2010; Carrivick and Tweed, 2013). Such lakes have increased in number, size, and volume around the world due to climate-warming-induced glacier melt (Carrivick and Tweed, 2013; Otto, 2019). Kellerer-Pirklbauer et al.: Buoyant calving and ice-contact lake at Pasterze Glacier (Austria)

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