Abstract

ABSTRACTSeasonal lake Gornersee forms at the confluence of Gornergletscher and Grenzgletscher, Switzerland, and experiences outburst floods annually in midsummer. To study the interplay between lake drainage, glacier movement and crevasse activity, high-frequency seismometers and GPS receivers were deployed in networks near Gornersee during the summer ablation seasons of 2004, 2006 and 2007. We use a Rayleigh wave coherence method to locate 3289, 7939 and 4087 icequakes, respectively, primarily along well-defined surface crevasses. We calculate two-dimensional strains from triads of GPS stations and find mean differential strain rates of ~300 × 10−6 d−1 with diurnal variations up to 800 × 10−6 d−1. Crevasse icequake activity and glacial velocity are highest during early season, then decrease as meltwater channels erode and subglacial water pressure decreases. Glacial response to Gornersee drainage varied year-to-year, with icequake activity promoted at some crevasses and inhibited at others, suggesting syn-drainage icequakes may be indicative of local drainage patterns and small-scale features of the stress field. Diurnal pulses in icequake activity exhibit peak activity at different times of day in different locations, coincident with a southeast-to-northwest trending concentrated shear zone near the Gornergletscher–Grenzgletscher confluence, likely due to differences in the timing of peak strain rate in these regions.

Highlights

  • Gornergletscher is Switzerland’s second largest glacier, located in southern Switzerland near the border with Italy (Fig. 1)

  • Gornergletscher icequakes and surface strain throughout the ablation season We begin by assessing the average icequake activity and surface velocity for the four different time windows within our study period: early season, mid-season, during drainage and post-drainage (Table 2 and Table S7)

  • We find that in all 3 years, icequake activity decreases by ∼50% between the early season and the mid-season, while GPS velocities decrease by ∼25%

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Summary

Introduction

Gornergletscher is Switzerland’s second largest glacier, located in southern Switzerland near the border with Italy (Fig. 1). This glacier has an area of 60 km, stretches 14 km in length over altitudes 2200–4550 m with a maximum ice thickness of more than 400 m (Huss, 2005). We focus on a region located at the confluence of two large tributary glaciers, Gornergletscher and Grenzgletscher, at an elevation of 2600 m ∼5 km from the glacier terminus. The flowline of Grenzgletscher rotates counterclockwise from north to west as it heads toward the western terminus

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