Abstract

Located south of Grenoble, in the French Alps, Glacier de Sarennes is a small cirque glacier whose mass balance has been measured since 1948.Field measurements are made after the accumulation period (from October to May) and during the ablation period (from June to September). The main variables for snow are depth, density, and water equivalent for accumulation, together with ice depth and water equivalent for ablation which are used to calculate mass balance and regime. We present an example of the data collected on the glacier during the 1986–87 season, the evolution of the mass balance during the summer of 1987, and the main variables followed during the 40 years of observation, 1948–88. Mass balance, accumulation, and ablation are directly related to precipitation and temperature. Glacier de Sarennes is a simple glacier which has no tongue and no ice movement, and is like a gigantic rain gauge. The evolution of its mass balance is simply related to the meteorological variables of the year. For more significant and complex glaciers, it is necessary to take account of past as well as present meteorological variables.

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