Dynamical change at tidewater glaciers examined using time-lapse photogrammetry
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Abstract
Retreating glaciers and ice sheets provide a significant contribution to sea level
rise, which will affect future populations and their activities. Accurate sea
level projections are needed in order to best inform policy makers, but these
projections are limited by our understanding of dynamical change at marine-terminating
glaciers. Terrestrial time-lapse photography has proved to be a
viable approach for obtaining high-detail observational records, and is used here
to examine signals of dynamical change at two tidewater glaciers in Svalbard.
Photogrammetric measurements were extracted using PyTrx (`Python Tracking'),
a new photogrammetry toolbox that has been developed here for deriving
velocities (e.g. glacier surface velocity), surface areas (e.g. supraglacial lake
area, surfacing plume area), and line distances (e.g. terminus profiles). PyTrx
has been created as a Python-alternative photogrammetry software, and offers
additional functionality to the typical monoscopic feature-tracking toolboxes that
are currently available.
Subglacial hydrology and its relation to basal sliding were examined at Kronebreen,
Svalbard. The results revealed a difference in flow efficiency between the
north and south regions of the glacier tongue, which influences spatial patterns in
surface velocities. Long-term changes in ice flow were concluded to be controlled
by the location of effcient and inefficient drainage, and the position of regions
where water is stored and released. Changes in terminus conditions and calving
processes were examined at Tunabreen, a surge-type tidewater glacier. Observations
suggested that atmospheric forcing plays a larger role in terminus stability
than previously considered, and it is likely that terminus dynamics at Tunabreen
are the product of a unique interplay between oceanic and atmospheric forcing
which are shaped by the glacier's surge-type nature. Additionally, calving activity
at Tunabreen can be characterised as high-frequency, low-magnitude events, and
a high proportion of its long-term calving activity can be attributed to the rate
of under-cutting at the terminus.
In all, these studies demonstrate that long-term changes in glacier dynamics
are dictated by the small changes in basal and terminus conditions, and how
they vary from year-to-year. Future research now needs to be directed towards
understanding how small-scale processes vary over multiple melt seasons, in order
to establish how they operate at longer timescales. PyTrx provides an appropriate
basis to continue this work and expand the capabilities of the toolbox.
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