Abstract

With ongoing climate change, there is a pressing need to better understand how much water is stored as ground ice in areas with extensive permafrost occurrence and how the regional water balance may alter in response to the potential generation of melt water from permafrost degradation. However, field-based data on permafrost in remote and mountainous areas such as the South-American Andes is scarce and most current ground ice estimates are based on broadly generalised assumptions such as volume-area scaling and mean ground ice content estimates of rock glaciers. In addition, ground ice contents in permafrost areas outside of rock glaciers are usually not considered, resulting in a significant uncertainty regarding the volume of ground ice in the Andes, and its hydrological role. In part I of this contribution, Hilbich et al. (submitted) present an extensive geophysical data set based on Electrical Resistivity Tomography (ERT) and Refraction Seismic Tomography (RST) surveys to detect and quantify ground ice of different landforms and surface types in several study regions in the semi-arid Andes of Chile and Argentina with the aim to contribute to the reduction of this data scarcity. In part II we focus on the development of a methodology for the upscaling of geophysical-based ground ice quantification to an entire catchment to estimate the total ground ice volume (and its estimated water equivalent) in the study areas. In addition to the geophysical data, the upscaling approach is based on a permafrost distribution model and classifications of surface and landform types. Where available, ERT and RST measurements were quantitatively combined to estimate the volumetric ground ice content using petrophysical relationships within the Four Phase Model (Hauck et al., 2011). In addition to introducing our upscaling methodology, we demonstrate that the estimation of large-scale ground ice volumes can be improved by including (i) non-rock glacier permafrost occurrences, and (ii) field evidence through a large number of geophysical surveys and ground truthing information. The results of our study indicate, that (i) conventional ground ice estimates for rock-glacier dominated catchments without in-situ data may significantly overestimate ground ice contents, and (ii) substantial volumes of ground ice may also be present in catchments where rock glaciers are lacking.

Highlights

  • IntroductionIn many arid and semiarid areas around the world, mountain regions play a significant role for controlling downstream water supply

  • There is a pressing need to better understand how much water is stored as ground ice in areas with extensive permafrost occurrence and how the regional water balance may alter in response to the potential generation of melt water from permafrost degradation

  • In part I of this contribution, Hilbich et al present an extensive geophysical data set based on Electrical Resistivity Tomography (ERT) and Refraction Seismic Tomography (RST) surveys to detect and quantify ground ice of different landforms and surface types in several study regions in the semi10 arid Andes of Chile and Argentina with the aim to contribute to the reduction of this data scarcity

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Summary

Introduction

In many arid and semiarid areas around the world, mountain regions play a significant role for controlling downstream water supply. With continued climate change further enhancing the recession of glaciers globally, their contribution to the summer runoff will eventually decline, whereby the timing of this decline differs globally based on the region (IPCC, 2019). Water availability, and its timing, will drastically change. In this context, the permafrost distribution, the corresponding ground ice content and its degradation is of increasing importance, as it is currently debated whether permafrost ground ice can be considered as a significant water reservoir and as an alternative 30 resource of fresh water that could potentially moderate water scarcity during dry seasons in the future (Brenning, 2005; Azócar and Brenning, 2010; Duguay et al, 2015; Hoelzle et al, 2017; Jones et al, 2019; Liaudat et al, 2020). There is a pressing need to better understand i) how much water is stored as ground ice in areas with extensive permafrost occurrence and ii) how the regional water balance may alter in response to the potential generation of melt water from permafrost degradation

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