Abstract

Abstract Due to increased demand for electric energy, which in Norway is produced almost entirely by hydro-electric power plants, extensive glacierized basins are now considered for future power production, However, glacier behaviour has a great impact on the annual run-off from these basins, and information about expected annual deviations from a “normal” discharge must be obtained from mass-balance studies on representative glaciers within the basin. For this reason such studies are presently performed at eight selected Norwegian glaciers; the costs involved are in the order of $3 000-$10 000 annually for each observed glacier. The transient snow line can be identified easily on conventional air photographs and its height determined by direct comparisons with reliable topographie maps (with contour lines on glaciers). The resolution in ERTS images is sufficiently good to use the satellite data for a similar height determination of the transient snow line on glaciers—at least on the larger valley glaciers and, of course, on ice caps. Due to an existing correlation between the height of the transient snow line (at the end of the melt season) and the annual specific net mass balance, it is possible to construct a diagram expressing this relationship, provided detailed mass-balance studies have been performed during a period of several years of different mass-balance conditions (ideally comprising both years of negative and of positive net balances). Determinations of the transient snow-line height based upon ERTS data, obtained at the end of the summer season, can then be used to determine the mass balance for those glaciers where the above-mentioned relationship is established. This would be a great advantage in cases where there is a request for information on the net balance only; no separate data on winter balance or summer balance will be obtained by this method. Experiments have been performed to delineate the transient snow line on glaciers directly from ERTS digital data (CCT magnetic tape). The results indicate that last winter’s snow is characterized by grey-levels 41-48 (of 63 possible grey-scale levels) on MSS-7, whereas exposed glacier ice is represented by levels 13—20 in the same multi-spectral band. Snow and ice can also be separated on MSS-4, but the difference in grey-scale levels between the two materials is much smaller.

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