Abstract

ABSTRACT Intact rock glaciers are common periglacial landforms that occur in cold alpine mountains and are often considered indicators of alpine permafrost. They can be both active and inactive, but both have ice in them and can be hydrologically significant. Little is known about the distribution of the rock glaciers in the Himalaya at basin-scale and content of water that can be hydrologically significant during the water-stressed months. We have found 967 intact rock glaciers covering an area of 306 km2 in the river basins of Beas, Chenab, Ravi, Sutlej, and Yamuna. Out of these, around 77% are moraine derived and the rest are talus derived. Most of them occur in the elevation between 4000 and 4500 m having a slope of 10° to 30° with a westerly and south-westerly aspect. They start occurring from 3220 to 6206 m, in places with −10°C to 10°C mean monthly temperature and within 50–100 cm of average monthly precipitation. Their alignment suggests that these rock glaciers occur in the area with low to medium incoming solar radiations. These rock glaciers are generally found where the general rock types are low-grade metamorphic rocks and feldspar-rich intrusive granites occurring beyond the Main Central Thrust in the Higher Himalaya. Finally, we calculated about 8.5 billion m3 volume of water (ice water equivalent) stored in them, considering 60% of the volume of rock glaciers is ice.

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