Affiliation:
1. State Key Laboratory of Tibetan Plateau Earth System Environment and Resources (TPESER) Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China
2. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China
3. Center for the Pan‐Third Pole Environment Lanzhou University Lanzhou China
Abstract
AbstractExtreme glacier melt has important implications for climate change studies and glacier‐related hazards. Few attempts have been made to study the characteristics and mechanisms of extreme melt on the Tibetan Plateau (TP) and surroundings, one of the largest concentrations of glaciers beyond the polar regions. To address this gap, we investigated the magnitude and possible drivers of anomalous early spring glacier melt in 2022 on the central TP using multi‐source observations (October 2020–July 2022) of Kuoqionggangri and Sangqu glaciers and an energy and mass balance model. Our results show that anomalous melt of both glaciers occurred in early spring (18 March–10 April 2022), when glaciers are traditionally expected to be frozen. There were 89 cumulative hours with air temperatures above 0°C, with a positive cumulative air temperature of 121.80°C hour at 5,700 m on Kuoqionggangri Glacier. The glacier‐wide cumulative melts on Kuoqionggangri and Sangqu glaciers from 18 March to 10 April 2022 were 22 ± 14.2 and 48 ± 37.5 mm w.e., respectively. Such anomalous glacier melt was driven by high incoming shortwave radiation and sensible heat flux, which were influenced by low cloud fraction and precipitation, and high air temperature during early spring. The weakening and northward‐shift of the westerlies, coupled with descending air motions over the central TP, reduced cloud fraction and hindered the transport of cold, moist air to the central TP. These changes occurred both in the central TP and the Himalaya, indicating the influence of macroscale atmospheric circulation patterns on this extreme glacier melt.
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)