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Title: DODEC Poster section 3


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Measured Climate Induced Volume Changes of Three
Glaciers and Current Glacier-Climate Response Pr
ediction
By D.C. Trabant1, R.S. March1, L.H. Cox1, W.D
. Harrison2, and E.G. Josberger1
1 - US Geological Survey 2 - University of Ala
ska, Fairbanks
Two small but hydrologically significant shifts
in climate have affected the rates of glacier
volume change at the three U.S. Geological Survey
Benchmark glacier. Bla bal bla .
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ABSTRACT Two small but hydrologically signific
ant shifts in climate have affected the rates of
glacier volume change at the three U.S.
Geological Survey Benchmark glaciers. Rate
changes are detected as inflections in the
cumulative conventional and reference-surface
mass-balances of Wolverine and Gulkana Glaciers
in Alaska and South Cascade Glacier in
Washington. All mass-balance trends and
inflection points are strongly correlated with
the 1976/77 and 1989 interdecadal climate-regime
shifts that are recognized in several climate
indices for the North Pacific and the National
Center for Environmental Prediction (NCEP)
re-analysis data. Wolverine Glacier is a
south-facing valley glacier on the Kenai
Peninsula in south-central Alaska. Gulkana
Glacier is a south-facing branched valley glacier
on the southern flank of the Alaska Range in
interior Alaska, about 350 kilometers northeast
of Wolverine Glacier. South Cascade Glacier is in
the North Cascade Mountains of northern
Washington. The cumulative mass balances are
robust and have recently been corroborated by
geodetic determinations of glacier volume change.
Furthermore, the four-decade length of record is
unique for the western hemisphere. Balance trends
at South Cascade Glacier in Washington are
generally in the opposite sense compared with
Wolverine Glacier in Alaska NCEP correlation of
winter balance with local winter temperatures is
positive at 0.59 for Wolverine and 0.64 for
South Cascade Glacier. At Wolverine Glacier, the
negative trend of cumulative mass balances, since
measurements began in 1965, was replaced by a
growth trend (positive mass balances) during the
late 1970s and 1980s. The positive mass-balance
trend was driven by increased precipitation
during the 1976/77 to 1989 period. At Gulkana
Glacier, the cumulative mass-balance trend has
been negative throughout its measurement history,
but with rate-change inflection points that
coincide with the interdecadal climate-regime
shifts in the North Pacific indices. At South
Cascade Glacier, the mass-loss trend, observed
since measurements began in 1953, was replaced by
a positive trend between 1970 and 1976 then
became strongly and continuously negative until
1997 when the rate of loss generally decreased.
Since 1989, the trends of the glaciers in Alaska
have also been strongly negative. These loss
rates are the highest rates in the entire record.
The strongly negative trends during the 1990s
agree with climate studies that suggest that the
period since the 1989 regime shift has been
unusual.   Volume response time and reference s
urface balance are the current suggested methods
for analyzing the response of glaciers to
climate. Volume response times are relatively
simple to determine and can be used to evaluate
the temporal, areal, and volumetric affects of a
climate change. However, the quasi-decadal period
between the recent climate-regime shifts is
several times less than the theoretical volume
readjustment response times for the benchmark
glaciers. If hydrologically significant climate
shifts recur at quasi-decadal intervals and if
most glaciers volume-response times are several
times longer (true for all but a few small, steep
glaciers), most medium and large glaciers are
responding to the current climate and a fading
series of regime shifts which, themselves, vary
in magnitude. This confused history of driver
trends prevent conventional balances from being
simply correlated with climate. Reference-surface
balances remove the dynamic response of glaciers
from the balance trend by holding the surface
area distribution constant. This effectively
makes the reference surface balances directly
correlated with the current climatic forcing. The
challenging problem of predicting how a glacier
will respond to real changes in climate may
require a combination of the volume response time
and reference surface mass balances applied to a
long time-series of measured values that contain
hydrologically significant variations.
An unprecedented rate of mass-balance change has
occurred at both Gulkana and Wolverine Glaciers
since 1988.
Measured Climate Induced Volume Changes of Three
Glaciers and Current Glacier-Climate Response
Prediction by D.C. Trabant, R.S. March, L. H. Co
x, W.D Harrison, and E.G. Josberger
U.S. Geological Survey and University of Alaska
Gulkana, Wolverine, and South Cascade Glaciers
Cumulative Net Mass Balance

http//www-water-ak.usgs.gov/glaciology
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