Abstract

In the Northern Romanian Carpathians (NRC) small Pleistocene cirque glaciers have formed in several isolated mountain massifs exceeding 1800 m asl. This paper brings forward new geomorphological evidence of marginal glaciation in the Călimani, Suhard, and Gurghiu Mountains which are the southernmost glaciated areas of the NRC.We reconstructed the extent and ice-surface geometry for 12 palaeo-glaciers in the study area during the Maximal Ice Extent (MIE) which is attributed to LGM. The equilibrium line altitudes (ELAs) calculated using the area-altitude-balance-ratio (AABR) 1.6. were between 1740 m and 1870 m which is the highest value in the Eastern Carpathians and one of the highest in the entire Carpathians. The specific features of the Călimani and Gurghiu Mountains are the extensive, gentle outer slopes of volcanic calderas that play an important role as additional areas for snowblow accumulation. Inclusion of the potential snow contribution area (snowblow and avalanche accumulation) in the ELA calculation resulted in an additional upward ELA shift up to 66 m (up to 40% of the glacier elevation range).Our data indicate that small cirque glaciation in the NRC could develop when mountain ranges are at least 100 m above the extrapolated regional ELA. The general ELA pattern in the NRC shows a positive trend (∼3 m/km) which could reflect both the general rise in temperature and the starvation of precipitation toward the southeast. However, the observed eastward ELA rise on W-E transects in the Eastern Carpathians shows a pure precipitation effect and indicates the influence of zonal atmospheric circulation in the far interior of Europe during the LGM.

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