Abstract

Abstract. Approximately 25 % of the glacierized area in the Everest region is covered by debris, yet the surface mass balance of debris-covered portions of these glaciers has not been measured directly. In this study, ground-based measurements of surface elevation and ice depth are combined with terrestrial photogrammetry, unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) and satellite elevation models to derive the surface mass balance of the debris-covered tongue of Changri Nup Glacier, located in the Everest region. Over the debris-covered tongue, the mean elevation change between 2011 and 2015 is −0.93 m year−1 or −0.84 m water equivalent per year (w.e. a−1). The mean emergence velocity over this region, estimated from the total ice flux through a cross section immediately above the debris-covered zone, is +0.37 m w.e. a−1. The debris-covered portion of the glacier thus has an area-averaged mass balance of −1.21 ± 0.2 m w.e. a−1 between 5240 and 5525 m above sea level (m a.s.l.). Surface mass balances observed on nearby debris-free glaciers suggest that the ablation is strongly reduced (by ca. 1.8 m w.e. a−1) by the debris cover. The insulating effect of the debris cover has a larger effect on total mass loss than the enhanced ice ablation due to supraglacial ponds and exposed ice cliffs. This finding contradicts earlier geodetic studies and should be considered for modelling the future evolution of debris-covered glaciers.

Highlights

  • Predicting the future of the Himalayan cryosphere and water resources depends on understanding the impact of climate change on glaciers (Lutz et al, 2014)

  • The demarcation between active glacier flow and stagnant glacier ice downstream of cross section M is crucial for our surface mass balance (SMB) assessment (Eq 2)

  • Several previous studies (Quincey et al, 2009; Rowan et al, 2015) have indicated that Changri Nup Glacier was connected to the Khumbu Glacier, a distance of nearly 3.5 km from the terminus delineated in this study

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Summary

Introduction

Predicting the future of the Himalayan cryosphere and water resources depends on understanding the impact of climate change on glaciers (Lutz et al, 2014). The role played by debris on the surface mass balance of glaciers and, in turn, on the glacier response to climate change remains unclear (Kääb et al, 2012). This debris layer insulates the glacier surface from the atmosphere when it reaches a sufficient thickness and complicates the response to climate change compared to clean-ice glaciers (Jouvet et al, 2011; Kirkbride and Deline, 2013; Østrem, 1959; Pellicciotti et al, 2015). Debris layers thicker than a few centimetres reduce ice melt rates as less surface heat will be conducted through the debris layer and transferred to the ice

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