Introduction
The Qinghai–Xizang (Ch’ing-hai–Hsi-tsang) (Tibet) Plateau, with a total area of about 2.4 × 106 km2, approximately a quarter of the area of China, is the largest and highest plateau area on Earth and a spectacular research area for the world’s scientists. Mt Amne Machin (Anyemaqen) and the Ch’i-lien Shan (Qilian Shan) lie to the north-east forming a natural divide between the glacier–permafrost of the plateau and the loess highlands.
The Amne Machin (Anyemaqen) Mountains (lat. 34–35 °N., long. 99–101 °E.) are 200 km long and 60 km wide. They form the eastern extension of the K’un-lun (Kunlun) Range where the Hwang Ho (Huanghe–Yellow) River makes a ring-shaped turn. Mt Amne Machin (Anyemaqen) also called Mt Chi-shih (Jishi) at 6 282 m a.s.l. has two sister peaks at 6 268 m and 6 090 m respectively and some 18 other peaks all above 5 000 m rising into the sky perennially snow-capped like guards at the gateway to the Ch’ing-hai–Hsi-tsang (Qinghai–Xizang) Plateau. Yaks and sheep graze below 4 500 m and along the Hwang Ho (Huanghe) Rivers are forests and tracts of farmland.
On completion of the glacier inventory, it was found that there are 40 glaciers in the Amne Machin (Anyemaqen) region with a total area of about 150 km2 and a water storage of about 13.8 × 109 m3. The average height of the snow-line is 4 926 m on the north-eastern slope and 5 230 m on the south-western slope. Based on ground surveys and satellite and air-photo interpretation, 15 of the glaciers are advancing, 2 are retreating and the remaining 23 are stable or have variations less than 18 m, within the error limits of the photogrammetric techniques used.
Table I clearly shows that the south-west-facing Ha-lung (Halong) and Wa-lo-ma (Walema) glaciers have advanced the most in the last 15 years; their firn basins connect directly to the main peak of Mt Amne Machin (Anyemaqen). The Yeh-ho-lung (Yiehelong) and Wei-ke-lo Tang-hsiung (Weigele Dangxiong) glaciers, both more than 7 km long, are retreating.
From the Ch’i-lien Shan (Qilian Shan) inventory (Lanzhou Institute of Glaciology and Cryopedology, Academia Sinica, 1981) we know that there are 2 859 glaciers in this region with a total area of about 1973 km2 and a water storage of about 130 × 109 m3. Every summer about 1 000 × 106 m3 of melt water flows to the Kansu (Gansu) Corridor irrigating some 10 million Chinese mu (0.7 × 106 ha) making up 14% of the total discharge and thus constituting a most important water resource for this dry region.
Since 1958, Chinese glaciologists, under Professor Shi Yafeng (i.e. Shih Ya-feng), have been investigating 31 glaciers in the Ch’i-lien (Qilian) mountains. Of these 21 retreated an average of 8.5 m/a from 1956 to 1976 and eight 4.9 m/a over the past 15 years. On the most recent expedition only two glaciers were found to be advancing; the Yang-lung he (Yanglonghe) hanging glacier and Ta-tu-ma (Daduma) glacier, located in the ice valley south of Chang-yeh (Zhangye). By August 1981 the latter had advanced about 250 m over the previous 20 years.
The Ch’i-lien Shan (Qilian Shan) glacier inventory also showed that the Turgen–Kakitu Range, located near the northern edge of the Tsaidam Basin, and with an average annual precipitation of less than 100 mm, holds 21% of the total glacierized area and 25.5% of the total water storage. The northern slope of the Ch’i-lien Shan (Qilian Shan) has 76.7% of the glaciers with an area of 1 335 km2. This area thus accounts for two-thirds of all the glaciers and the glacierized area of the Ch’i-lien Shan (Qilian Shan). The investigation of glacier variations in this region is extremely important because glacier melt water is used for agriculture, forestry, animal husbandry, and fisheries in the Kansu (Gansu) Corridor, because most of the glaciers have been retreating over the past 20 years, because the rate of retreat on the northern slope, with most of the glaciers, is about twice that of the southern slope, and because human impacts on the environment have led to reduction and degradation of other surface-water and ground-water supplies.
Although the main objectives of the Sino-German Joint Expedition were landscape and climatic geomorphology, studies of glaciers and their variations were included. The team not only investigated the Yang-lung he (Yanglonghe) and Leng-lung Ling (Lenglong Ling) glacier regions on the northern slope, where glaciologists have worked for many years, but also the flat-topped glaciers in the Kakitu to the south-west, a region never before visited by glaciologists. Other observations in the Hsi-ta-t’an (Xidatan) region, in the K’un-lun (Kunlun) mountains, permit a more realistic comparison between the glaciers of the Ch’i-lien Shan (Qilian Shan) and the Amne Machin (Anyemaqen).
2. Ha-lung (Halong) glacier
“The falling of one leaf heralds the autumn.” Ha-lung (Halong) glacier was selected as representative of the Amne Machin (Anyemaqen) because it is a large glacier connected to the main peak and because Shigeo Suizu, a member of the Japanese Toetsu Mountaineering Association for Anyemaqen Expedition 1981, had made a lot of measurements on it prior to the Sino-German expedition and was able to provide data on movement, accumulation, ablation, ice temperatures, and density.
(a) Glacier movement
The survey points established on Ha-lung (Halong) glacier by Suizu were augmented for the measurement of velocity and mass balance. Points were established around the snout for the measurement of glacier variations. Figure 1 shows the results of the ice-velocity measurements for the lower part of the glacier and Figure 2 the longitudinal change in ice velocity along the central flow-line.
Since 1966 the glacier has advanced 790 m and is still advancing. Based on its sudden rapid movement and cat-claw-like terminus it has been classified as a surging glacier (Fig. 3). Figures 1 and 2 show an area of rapid movement of up to 83 m/a 3 km from the terminus and an area 1.5 km down glacier with a maximum movement of only 5 m/a. These differences create a high emergence velocity which counteracts in whole or in part the surface lowering due to ablation. The kinematic wave consists of potential and kinetic energy with a velocity much faster than the general movement velocity of the glacier. A ratio C w was established between the normal and kinematic flow rates based on an advance of 790 m in 15 years and an annual velocity at the terminus of 4 cm/d in 1981, as follows:
i.e. the kinematic wave is at least 3.6 times faster than the general movement velocity of the glacier.
(b) Accumulation and ablation
The snow-line on Ha-lung (Halong) glacier is at about 4 860 m a.s.l. where three ice layers were measured having a total thickness of 175 cm. After considering evaporation the mean annual precipitation near the snow-line is estimated at 800 mm water equivalent. Ablation rates obtained were as follows: 31.7 mm/d at the terminus and 29.2 mm/d at a profile about 300 m below the snow-line. Owing to frequent blowing snow and its instantaneous melting during the period of observation the total ablation should include an average of 6 mm/d of precipitation.
(c) Density, ice temperatures, and snow-line
Ice samples were taken near the terminus of the glacier and the gas bubbles in them were found to change from ball-shaped near the snow-line to olive- or silkworm-shaped at the terminus. The ice was clean with a density of 0.89 Mg/m3.
Two bore holes were made with the Lanzhou Institute steam drill; a 10 m hole in the pyramid area near the terminus and a 7.3 m hole at 4 900 m near the snow-line. At 7–8 m depth ice temperatures were as low as −6.5 °C to −7.2 °C (Fig. 4). The height of the snow-line changes with aspect; 4 850 m on the north-eastern slope and 5 100 m on the south-western slope.
The general characteristics of Ha-lung (Halong) glacier are quite different from those of neighbouring glaciers in the Ch’i-lien Shan (Qilian Shan) yet are surprisingly similar to those of glaciers in the Himalaya and K’un-lun Shan (Kunlun Shan), a problem meriting further investigation.
(d) Future behaviour of the Ha-lung (Halong) glacier
During 1974–75 the Chinese Glacier Investigation Group prepared a forecast for Batura Glacier, in the Pakistan Karakoram, and made a successful field test in 1978 (Ba-tuo-la Bing-chuan Kao-cha-zu, 1982). In 1981, data were obtained for Ha-lung (Halong) glacier from which it is possible to forecast its future behaviour.
The direction of the glacier bed is taken as the X-coordinate and the elevation perpendicular to the bed as the Y-coordinate. The intersecting point of the snow-line and the main glacier flow-line is drawn on the Y-axis and then the longitudinal profile of the main flow-line is plotted in the coordinate system. The thickness, estimated by Lagally’s formula (Reference LagallyLagally, 1930), is about 200 m 2.5 km from the snout. The emergence rate and mass balance were measured below the snow-line. Generally, the emergence velocities and ablation rates increase down glacier, the former tending to increase the surface height and the latter to decrease it. The combination of these two provides the future glacier surface and a comparison with the existing glacier permits a forecast of future variations. Substituting data from Ha-lung (Halong) glacier, estimating future rates of ablation, and assuming that the period of the propagation of the kinematic wave from the high velocity area to the snout was 15 years, then
where V is the glacier velocity (73 m/a), α is the slope angle of the ice surface (0.1), and θ is the intersecting angle of the vector of movement relative to the ice surface, negative below and positive above (+ 0.05).
The increase in ice thickness at the snout after 15 years would be 164 m. The ablation value for the same period is calculated as follows:
So, the variation in height of the terminus after 15 years would be 164 − 104 = + 60 m. Figure 5 shows the simulated glacier profile and the evidence for the July 1981 prediction that “Halong Glacier will continue to surge in the next one to two decades” (Wang, 1982).
3. 5Y416G4 glacier in Leng-lung Ling (Lenglong Ling)
The Leng-lung Ling (Lenglong Ling) Range is situated at the eastern end of the Ch’i-lien Shan (Qilian Shan). It is the most easterly glacierized region and one in which Chinese glaciologists have been working for the past 23 years. Temporary surveying stations were established on the glaciers in 1963–64 and 1976 for systematic observations. In 1981, the Sino-German Joint Expedition continued studies on these glaciers.
(a) Glacier movement
In 1963, two velocity profiles were established across 5Y416G4 glacier, one at the terminus and the other near the snow-line, then at about 4 450 m a.s.l. Due to very low flow rates results from the former are considered unreliable, those from the latter are given in Table II.
In 1981 the profile near the snow-line could not be established due to bad weather. Wooden subtense bars were set in the ice at the terminus and provided the measurements for three days shown in Table III. Comparison between these data and those for 1963 showed velocities had increased and were about two times greater than those for No. 1 glacier in the T’ien Shan (Tian Shan) in 1973 (Reference WenyingWang and others, 1976).
(b) Glacier mass balance
Table IV shows the glacier mass balance for 5Y416G4 glacier from 1962 to 1981 (Reference Ke-xue-yuan, Bing-chuan, Yan-jiu-suo, Bing-xue and Yan-jiu-duiZhong-guo Ke-xue-yuan Lanzhou Bing-chuan Dong-tu Yan-jiu-suo, Qilian Shan Bing-xue Liyong Yan-jiu-dui, 1980). Apart from the negative balance of −53 mm for 1962–63 the rest of the balances are positive.
(c) Glacier temperatures and density
In 1976 a 10 m bore hole was drilled and gave a minimum temperature of −4 °C at a depth of 4 m in the Ch’i-lien Shan (Qilian Shan). Based on many samples the mean ice density was found to be 0.9 Mg/m3, marginally denser than that of Ha-lung (Halong) glacier.
(d) Glacier variations
Observations on the fluctuation of the tongue of 5Y416G4 glacier have been made for the past 25 years and ice-core analysis has provided data on the annual accumulation rates over the past 82 years for the Kakitu flat-topped glacier 5Y564A. Figure 6 shows a comparison between the last 30 years of data for the latter and the 25 years from the former. It shows that the terminus of 5Y416G4 glacier retreated rapidly from 1964 to 1976 but that this rate slowed between 1976 and 1981. On the flat-topped glacier in Kakitu there was a steady increase in the thickness of ice layers from 1971, especially so since 1977. This reflects the continually increasing annual precipitation which is also reflected in the positive glacier mass balances for the majority of glaciers surveyed. Analysis shows a lag of about 15 years for the glacier responding to changing weather so that the forecast change from glacier retreat to advance within the next 15 years is reasonable.
4. Conclusion
This paper has reported on glacier variations in the north-eastern part of the Ch’ing-hai–Hsi-tsang (Qinghai–Xizang) Plateau and predicts the trend of glacier variations for the near future.
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a. The Sino-German Joint Expedition to the Ch’ing-hai–Hsi-tsang (Qinghai–Xizang) Plateau established the first system of fixed and mobile observation stations. Forty glaciers in the Amne Machin (Anyemaqen) Mountains were investigated and their inventory completed; 15 were advancing, 2 retreating and the remainder stable. Basically, the advancing glaciers are in the centre of the Amne Machin (Anyemaqen) Massif and the two retreating glaciers on either end showing that glacier activity is not synchronous.
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b. Of the 31 glaciers in the Ch’i-lien Shan (Qilian Shan) measured, 29 have been retreating during the past 15–25 years and two little ones advancing. This is almost the opposite situation to that in the Amne Machin (Anyemaqen) Massif and calls for further investigation.
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c. The glacier inventory analysis and field studies show that aspect is an important factor in glacier distribution. The longer glaciers and the most heavily glacierized areas are found along the north-easterly slopes.
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d. Strong evidence was found for a link between climatic change and glacier response on Ha-lung (Halong) glacier. It is forecast that this glacier will continue to advance with a surge coming within 10–20 years. A systematic study of data from 5Y416G4 glacier, of Leng-lung Ling (Lenglong Ling) in the Ch’i-lien Shan (Qilian Shan), and other field observations indicate that most of the retreating glaciers in the Ch’i-lien Shan (Qilian Shan) will be advancing within 15 years.