Abstract

Abstract. One of the consequences of recent glacier recession in the Cordillera Blanca, Peru, is the risk of glacial lake outburst floods (GLOFs) from lakes that have formed at the base of retreating glaciers. GLOFs are often triggered by avalanches falling into glacial lakes, initiating a chain of processes that may culminate in significant inundation and destruction downstream. This paper presents simulations of all of the processes involved in a potential GLOF originating from Lake Palcacocha, the source of a previously catastrophic GLOF on 13 December 1941, killing about 1800 people in the city of Huaraz, Peru. The chain of processes simulated here includes (1) avalanches above the lake; (2) lake dynamics resulting from the avalanche impact, including wave generation, propagation, and run-up across lakes; (3) terminal moraine overtopping and dynamic moraine erosion simulations to determine the possibility of breaching; (4) flood propagation along downstream valleys; and (5) inundation of populated areas. The results of each process feed into simulations of subsequent processes in the chain, finally resulting in estimates of inundation in the city of Huaraz. The results of the inundation simulations were converted into flood intensity and preliminary hazard maps (based on an intensity-likelihood matrix) that may be useful for city planning and regulation. Three avalanche events with volumes ranging from 0.5 to 3 × 106 m3 were simulated, and two scenarios of 15 and 30 m lake lowering were simulated to assess the potential of mitigating the hazard level in Huaraz. For all three avalanche events, three-dimensional hydrodynamic models show large waves generated in the lake from the impact resulting in overtopping of the damming moraine. Despite very high discharge rates (up to 63.4 × 103 m3 s−1), the erosion from the overtopping wave did not result in failure of the damming moraine when simulated with a hydro-morphodynamic model using excessively conservative soil characteristics that provide very little erosion resistance. With the current lake level, all three avalanche events result in inundation in Huaraz due to wave overtopping, and the resulting preliminary hazard map shows a total affected area of 2.01 km2, most of which is in the high hazard category. Lowering the lake has the potential to reduce the affected area by up to 35 %, resulting in a smaller portion of the inundated area in the high hazard category.

Highlights

  • 1.1 Climate impacts in the Cordillera Blanca of PeruAtmospheric warming has induced melting of many glaciers around the world (WGMS, 2012; IPCC, 2013; Marzeion et al, 2014)

  • The process chain from avalanche to inundation was simulated using four models: potential avalanches were modeled using RAMMS (Christen et al, 2010), lake wave dynamics were modeled with FLOW3D (Flow Science, 2012), the dynamic breaching process was simulated in BASEMENT (Vetsch et al, 2006), and propagation of the flood wave downstream and inundation in Huaraz were simulated in FLO2D (O’Brien, 2003)

  • Overtopping wave discharge hydrographs were calculated at the moraine crest mid-way between the artificial dam and the 1941 breach (Fig. 3), and these hydrographs were used as calibration parameters for the dynamic breach model and as inputs to the downstream inundation model

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Summary

Introduction

1.1 Climate impacts in the Cordillera Blanca of PeruAtmospheric warming has induced melting of many glaciers around the world (WGMS, 2012; IPCC, 2013; Marzeion et al, 2014). 1.1 Climate impacts in the Cordillera Blanca of Peru. The formation of new lakes in de-glaciating highmountain regions strongly influences landscape characteristics and represents a significant hazard related to climate change (Frey et al, 2010; Rosenzweig et al, 2007; Kattleman, 2003; Richardson and Reynolds, 2000). The glaciercovered area of the Cordillera Blanca range in Peru has decreased from a Little Ice Age peak of 900 km to about 700 km in 1970, 528 km in 2003, and further decreased to 482 km in 2010 (UGRH, 2010; Burns and Nolin, 2014). As a consequence of this glacier recession, many glacial lakes have formed or expanded in the Cordillera Blanca that pose. Somos-Valenzuela et al.: Modeling a glacial lake outburst flood process chain various levels of glacial lake outburst flood (GLOF) risk for communities below these lakes (Emmer and Vilímek, 2013)

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