Abstract

<strong class="journal-contentHeaderColor">Abstract.</strong> High Mountain Asia (HMA) contains the largest concentration of glaciers outside the polar regions. These glaciers play an essential role in terms of water supply for the surrounding densely populated dry lowland areas. The retreat of glaciers and ice caps in this region can consequently have a major impact on societies. However, few modelling studies exist that examine in detail how individual ice bodies in the area are responding to climate change. Further, different climatic and topographic settings ensure a heterogenous impact of climate change on ice masses in the area. In this study, we focus on the western and central part of the Tien Shan Mountain range in the northwest of HMA. We use several measurements and reconstructions of the ice thickness, surface elevation, surface mass balance and ice temperature to study in detail six different ice bodies in the Kyrgyz Tien Shan: five valley glaciers and one ice cap. The selected ice masses are located in different sub-regions of the Tien Shan with different climatic settings, and they are all characterised by detailed recent glaciological measurements. A 3-dimensional higher-order thermomechanical ice-flow model is calibrated and applied to simulate the evolution of the ice masses since the Little Ice Age and to make a prognosis of the future evolution up to 2100 under different CMIP6 SSP climate scenarios. Further, projections of the total runoff of the ice masses are calculated. The results of this study reveal a strong retreat of most of the ice masses under all climate scenarios, however with important differences. These can be related to the specific climate regime of each of the ice bodies and their geometry. It is highlighted that because the main precipitation occurs in spring and early summer, the ice masses respond to climate change with an accelerating retreat.

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