Abstract

Abstract. In response to climate change, most glaciers are losing mass and hence contribute to sea-level rise. Repeated and accurate mapping of their surface topography is required to estimate their mass balance and to extrapolate/calibrate sparse field glaciological measurements. In this study we evaluate the potential of sub-meter stereo imagery from the recently launched Pléiades satellites to derive digital elevation models (DEMs) of glaciers and their elevation changes. Our five evaluation sites, where nearly simultaneous field measurements were collected, are located in Iceland, the European Alps, the central Andes, Nepal and Antarctica. For Iceland, the Pléiades DEM is also compared to a lidar DEM. The vertical biases of the Pléiades DEMs are less than 1 m if ground control points (GCPs) are used, but reach up to 7 m without GCPs. Even without GCPs, vertical biases can be reduced to a few decimetres by horizontal and vertical co-registration of the DEMs to reference altimetric data on ice-free terrain. Around these biases, the vertical precision of the Pléiades DEMs is ±1 m and even ±0.5 m on the flat glacier tongues (1σ confidence level). Similar precision levels are obtained in the accumulation areas of glaciers and in Antarctica. We also demonstrate the high potential of Pléiades DEMs for measuring seasonal, annual and multi-annual elevation changes with an accuracy of 1 m or better if cloud-free images are available. The negative region-wide mass balances of glaciers in the Mont-Blanc area (−1.04 ± 0.23 m a−1 water equivalent, w.e.) are revealed by differencing Satellite pour l'Observation de la Terre 5 (SPOT 5) and Pléiades DEMs acquired in August 2003 and 2012, confirming the accelerated glacial wastage in the European Alps.

Highlights

  • In a context of nearly global glacier wastage, new means to retrieve accurate and comprehensive measurements of glacier topography and elevation changes are welcome

  • A set of 22 ground control points (GCPs) was derived from a coarser resolution Satellite pour l’Observation de la Terre 5 (SPOT 5) data set (2.5 m orthoimage and 40 m digital elevation models (DEMs))

  • The horizontal precision of these GCPs is limited by the SPOT 5 pixel size (2.5 m) and their vertical precision is about ±5 m, the precision of the SPOT 5 DEM

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Summary

Introduction

In a context of nearly global glacier wastage, new means to retrieve accurate and comprehensive measurements of glacier topography and elevation changes are welcome. The geodetic method, based on the differencing of multi-temporal DEMs, has been used for decades to retrieve glacier-wide and region-wide glacier mass balances Bamber and Rivera, 2007; Finsterwalder, 1954) This method reveals the spatial patterns of elevation changes over individual glaciers or entire regions. The differences between multi-temporal DEMs derived from aerial photos and airborne lidar can be used to check and, if necessary, correct cumulative mass balances measured using the field-based glaciological method over periods of typically 5–10 years Lidar data from the Ice, Cloud and land Elevation Satellite (ICESat) mission (and from the future ICESat-2) remain too sparse to provide a comprehensive coverage of individual glaciers; mass balances can be retrieved reliably only for sufficiently large regions (Arendt et al, 2013; Gardner et al, 2013; Kääb et al, 2012). DEMs derived from sub-meter stereo images have the potential to fill this gap between coarse spaceborne DEMs and very high resolution DEMs from aerial surveys

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