Abstract

Abstract. Translated into modern terminology, Kurowski suggested in 1891 that the equilibrium line altitude (ELA) of a glacier is equal to the mean altitude of the glacier when the whole glacier is in balance between accumulation and ablation. Kurowski's method has been widely misunderstood, partly due to inappropriate use of statistical terminology by later workers, and has only been tested by Braithwaite and Müller in a 1980 paper (for 32 glaciers). I now compare Kurowski's mean altitude with balanced-budget ELA calculated for 103 present-day glaciers with measured surface mass-balance data. Kurowski's mean altitude is significantly higher (at 95 % level) than balanced-budget ELA for 19 outlet and 42 valley glaciers, but not significantly higher for 34 mountain glaciers. The error in Kurowski mean altitude as a predictor of balanced-budget ELA might be due to generally lower balance gradients in accumulation areas compared with ablation areas for many glaciers, as suggested by several workers, but some glaciers have higher gradients, presumably due to precipitation increase with altitude. The relatively close agreement between balanced-budget ELA and mean altitude for mountain glaciers (mean error – 8 m with standard deviation 59 m) may reflect smaller altitude ranges for these glaciers such that there is less room for effects of different balance gradients to manifest themselves.

Highlights

  • IntroductionLudwig Kurowski was born in 1866 in Napajedla, Moravia ( in the Austrian Empire and in the Czech Republic), and died in 1912 in Vienna (http://mahren.germanistika.cz)

  • Ludwig Kurowski was born in 1866 in Napajedla, Moravia, and died in 1912 in Vienna. For his doctoral-thesis research at the University of Vienna, Kurowski (1891) studied the snow line (German: Schneegrenze) in the Finsteraarhorn region of the Swiss Alps. He suggested the altitude of the snow line on a glacier is equal to the mean altitude of the glacier when snow accumulation and melt are in balance for the whole glacier

  • A relatively recent definition of snow line (Armstrong et al, 1973) is “the line or zone on land that separates areas in which fallen snow disappears in summer from areas in which snow remains throughout the year

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Ludwig Kurowski was born in 1866 in Napajedla, Moravia ( in the Austrian Empire and in the Czech Republic), and died in 1912 in Vienna (http://mahren.germanistika.cz). For his doctoral-thesis research at the University of Vienna, Kurowski (1891) studied the snow line (German: Schneegrenze) in the Finsteraarhorn region of the Swiss Alps. He suggested the altitude of the snow line on a glacier is equal to the mean altitude of the glacier when snow accumulation and melt are in balance for the whole glacier. Students of snow line in the 19th century would have broadly agreed with this definition before Ratzel (1886) introduced extra terms like climatic and orographic to qualify snow line. Ratzel (1886) argued that the material left at the end of the melt season is firn rather than snow but Kurowski (1891) does not use Ratzel’s preferred term Firngrenze

Objectives
Findings
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call