Effects of topographic and meteorological parameters on the surface area loss of ice aprons in the Mont Blanc massif (European Alps)
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Published:2022-10-12
Issue:10
Volume:16
Page:4251-4271
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ISSN:1994-0424
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Container-title:The Cryosphere
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language:en
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Short-container-title:The Cryosphere
Author:
Kaushik Suvrat, Ravanel Ludovic, Magnin FlorenceORCID, Yan Yajing, Trouve Emmanuel, Cusicanqui DiegoORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Ice aprons (IAs) are part of the critical components of the Alpine
cryosphere. As a result of the changing climate over the past few decades,
deglaciation has resulted in a surface decrease of IAs, which has not yet
been documented, except for a few specific examples. In this study, we
quantify the effects of climate change on IAs since the mid-20th
century in the Mont Blanc massif (western European Alps). We then evaluate
the role of meteorological parameters and the local topography in the
behaviour of IAs. We precisely mapped the surface areas of 200 IAs using
high-resolution aerial and satellite photographs from 1952, 2001, 2012 and
2019. From the latter inventory, the surface area of the present individual
IAs ranges from 0.001 to 0.04 km2. IAs have lost their surface area
over the past 70 years, with an alarming increase since the early 2000s. The
total area, from 7.93 km2 in 1952, was reduced to 5.91 km2 in 2001
(−25.5 %) before collapsing to 4.21 km2 in 2019 (−47 % since
1952). We performed a regression analysis using temperature and
precipitation proxies to better understand the effects of meteorological
parameters on IA surface area variations. We found a strong correlation
between both proxies and the relative area loss of IAs, indicating the
significant influence of the changing climate on the evolution of IAs. We
also evaluated the role of the local topographic factors in the IA area
loss. At a regional scale, factors like direct solar radiation and elevation
influence the behaviour of IAs, while others like curvature, slope and size
of the IAs seem to be rather important on a local scale.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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