Mesoscale atmospheric circulation controls of local meteorological elevation gradients on Kersten Glacier near Kilimanjaro summit
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Published:2020-07-30
Issue:3
Volume:11
Page:653-672
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ISSN:2190-4987
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Container-title:Earth System Dynamics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Earth Syst. Dynam.
Author:
Mölg ThomasORCID, Hardy Douglas R.ORCID, Collier EmilyORCID, Kropač ElenaORCID, Schmid Christina, Cullen Nicolas J., Kaser Georg, Prinz RainerORCID, Winkler Michael
Abstract
Abstract. Elevation gradients of meteorological variables in
mountains are of interest to a number of scientific disciplines and often
required as parameters in modeling frameworks. Measurements of such
gradients on glaciers, however, are particularly scarce and strongly skewed
towards the midlatitudes and valley glaciers. This article adds a tropical
perspective and presents 4 years of overlapping measurements at 5603
and 5873 m on Kersten Glacier, Kilimanjaro (East Africa), between 2009 and
2013. Mean gradients in near-surface air temperature (T), water vapor
pressure (VP), and snow accumulation (ACC) per 100 m elevation are −0.75 ∘C, −0.16 hPa, and -114±16 mm w.e. yr−1,
respectively. An intriguing feature is a strong diurnal cycle of the T and VP
gradients, which are (depending on season) 2–4 times larger between early
and late morning than in the hours of weak gradients. The ACC decrease with
elevation, furthermore, is mostly the result of a lower recorded frequency
of ACC events at the upper measurement site and not due to contrasting
amounts at the two altitudes during events. A novel facet of our study is the
linking of measured on-glacier gradients to a high-resolution atmospheric
modeling data set, which reveals the importance of the mesoscale atmospheric
circulation. A thermally direct circulation is established over the mountain
in response to diabatic surface heating or cooling with upslope flow during the
day and downslope flow in the night. This persistent circulation
communicates heat and moisture changes in the lowlands to the higher
elevations during morning and early afternoon, which is evident in the
advection patterns of potential temperature and VP, and shapes the
time variability in gradients as recorded by our weather stations on the
glacier. A few local processes seem to matter as well (glacier sublimation,
turbulent heat fluxes), yet they show a secondary influence only during
limited time windows. Atmospheric model data also demonstrate that declining
moist entropy and water vapor fluxes in the summit zone favor formation of
the negative ACC gradient. The results extend the empirical basis of
elevation gradients in high mountains, in particular over glacier
surfaces, by the unusual case of a slope glacier on an equatorial,
free-standing massif. Our measurement–model link, moreover, demonstrates an
approach for future studies to put observations of elevation gradients more
systematically in a multiscale process context.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
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