Introduction
The advance or retreat of a glacier may be a good indicator of climate change, especially when many glaciers in a region are considered. However, several dynamic processes can result in terminus changes that are independent of climate. Best known of these is the phenomenon of surging, which has resulted in terminus advances of many kilometers in just a few years (Reference Meier and PostMeier and Post, 1969). There are a number of excellent studies of surge-type glaciers including Variegated Glacier in Alaska (Reference KambKamb and others, 1985; Reference Raymond and HarrisonRaymond and Harrison, 1988) and Trapridge Glacier in neighboring Yukon Territory, Canada (Reference Clarke, Collins and ThompsonClarke and others, 1984).
Several lesser known dynamic processes can result in non-climatic terminus changes. Mud and ash emitted by volcanic eruptions can blanket the ablation area of a glacier, reducing melt and triggering an advance (Reference Muller and CoulterMuller and Coulter, 1957; Reference Sturm, Benson and MacKeithSturm and others, 1986, Reference Sturm, Benson and MacKeith1988). In a similar fashion, massive amounts of rock can fall from over-steepened slopes or be shaken down by earthquakes, covering part of a glacier in a thick mantle of debris. This debris increases the load, decreases the ablation, and can result in an advance of the glacier (Reference MillerMiller, 1960; Reference Ragle, Sater and FieldRagle and others, 1965; Reference ShreveShreve, 1966; Reference Bull, Marangunic and ŌuraBull and Marangunic, 1967; Reference FieldField, 1968; Post, 1968; Reference Tuthill, Field and ClaytonTuthill and others, 1968; Reference ReidReid, 1969; Reference MarangunicMarangunic, 1972; Reference Gardner and HewittGardner and Hewitt, 1990). In this paper we focus on termini changes resulting from two other non-climatic phenomena: volcanic heating and the tide-water glacier cycle. The examples presented here from the Wrangell and Chugach Mountains of Alaska demonstrate the importance of understanding the dynamic setting when attempting to interpret changes in climate from glacier-terminus fluctuations.
The examples also demonstrate the way in which methods of monitoring glacier-terminus fluctuations have evolved during this century and how they can be combined to produce long records (80–100 years) of terminus fluctuations. In 1926, one of the authors (W. O. F.) began making measurements on Alaskan tidewater glaciers. At that time, an expedition of several months’ duration was required to get to the glaciers and do the mapping. Termini were surveyed using a theodolite from control points established by triangulation. Such surveys are accurate to within a few meters. By the 1940s, aerial photography of Alaskan glaciers began to be used to monitor terminus fluctuations. With proper ground-control points, photogrammetric techniques can be used to produce maps from which terminus changes of about 10 m or less can be measured. The photogrammetric measurements can be related to the older surveys if the control points can be identified on the photographs. Within the last two decades, it has become possible to measure glaciers from space (Reference SwithinbankSwithinbank and others, 1988). Using digital processing, images taken from satellites can be used to measure terminus changes accurate to approximately ±80 m without the need for control surveys. This is especially valuable in areas where terrestrial surveys are difficult or impossible. The satellite images can be related to aerial photographs by matching topographic features, and to the older terrestrial surveys by identifying topographic features near the survey points. While the advent of remote sensing has greatly reduced the time and effort necessary to make glacier-terminus measurements, highly accurate measurements still require surveying or controled aerial photography, but this may change in time.
Methods
Specific details of the three methods used in the study are:
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(1) Terrestrial surveys. Intersection surveys using a theodolite from a base line of known length, or bearing-distance surveys using a theodolite and distance ranger from a known point have been used to map glacier termini with an accuracy of ± 5 m or better, depending on how well the base line was established. Glaciers in College Fjord in the Chugach Mountains were surveyed in this manner by W. O. F. in 1931, 1935, 1961, 1964, 1966, 1974 and 1976. A survey in 1957 was done by M. T. Millett. The most recent survey was done in 1989 by M.S. and C. S. B. Earlier surveys in College Fjord were done in 1899 (Reference GilbertGilbert, 1903), 1905, 1909 (Reference Grant and HigginsGrant and Higgins, 1913) and 1910 (Reference Tarr and MartinTarr and Martin, 1914). Glaciers on the northeast flank of Mount Wrangell were surveyed annually from 1977 to 1983 by the authors.
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(2) Photogrammetry. Changes in the terminus positions of glaciers were determined by comparing aerial and terrestrial photographs. On Mount Wrangell, the first aerial photographs were taken by Bradford Washburn in 1937. Subsequent aerial photography was done by the USGS in 1948 and 1957. We have taken oblique and vertical aerial photographs of the summit and flank glaciers from 1961 to the present. Orthophoto maps Footnote * (scale = 1:25 000) were made from the photographs taken in 1957, 1977, 1979, 1981 and 1988 (Reference SturmSturm, 1983; Reference Benson and FollettBenson and Follett, 1986). Comparison of these ortho-photo maps allows changes in glacier termini to be measured to ±10 m. In College Fjord, terrestrial photographs are available from 1899 (Reference GilbertGilbert, 1903), 1909 (Reference Grant and HigginsGrant and Higgins, 1913), 1910 (Reference Tarr and MartinTarr and Martin, 1914) and 1914 (Reference KeenKeen, 1915). We (primarily American Geographical Society parties with W. O. F.) have continued the series with photographs taken from the same vantage points during the survey years mentioned above. Austin Post supplied data from vertical aerial photographs taken of Yale Glacier in 1987 and 1990.
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(3) Satellite imagery. Landsat Multispectral Scanner (MSS; 80 m resolution) and Thematic Mapper (TM; 30 m resolution) images were analyzed to determine terminus changes (Reference Krimmel and MeierKrimmel and Meier, 1975; Reference Hall, Bayr and KovalickHall and others, 1988). Lower-resolution MSS images were registered digitally to the higher-resolution TM images using rock outcrops as control points. Fifteen or more control points were matched in each 512 by 512 pixel image to ensure good registration. Once registered, changes in terminus positions could be determined for all the glaciers in the image with a resolution of about 80 m. The images we have used are:
Mount Wrangell:
MSS (18 September 1973) vs TM (16 September 1986), College Fjord:
MSS (15 August 1973) vs TM (1 August 1985).
Terminus Advance in the Wrangell Mountains Associated with Volcanic Heating
Mount Wrangell (elevation 4317 m) is an active volcano located near the northwestern end of the Wrangell Mountains (Fig. 1, inset) (Reference BensonBenson, 1968). Its summit caldera is about 6 km across and filled with ice to depths greater than 500 m (Reference Clarke, Cross and BensonClarke and others, 1989); along its rim are three craters, 0.5–1.0 km in diameter, and several active fumarole fields. Fifteen glaciers radiate from the summit ice cap (Fig. 1). Mount Wrangell’s recent volcanic history includes probable minor phreatic eruptions in 1899, 1902, 1908, 1911, 1912, 1921 and 1930 (Reference MotykaMotyka, 1983). No lava flows younger than several thousand years have been identified nor are they likely to exist (personal communication from C.J. Nye, Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys, 1990).
An abrupt increase in the volcanic heat flux centered under the North Crater (Fig. 1) took place in 1965 (Reference Benson, Bingham and WhartonBenson and others, 1975; Reference Benson and MotykaBenson and Motyka, 1978; Reference MotykaMotyka, 1983; Reference Benson, Motyka, Bingham, Wharton, MacKeith, Sturm, Kotlyakov, Vinogradov and Glaz-ovskiyBenson and others, 1985). We believe this was a result of the great Alaska earthquake of 27 March 1964 centered in nearby Prince William Sound (National Academy of Sciences, 1968). The change in heat flux was manifest in increased fumarolic activity along the rim and increased melting of the ice in the North Crater. Between 1908 (Reference DunnDunn, 1909) and 1965 this ice-filled crater was in equilibrium, with accumulation balanced by glacier flow and basal melting due to geothermal heat (there is no surface melting at this elevation). Since 1965, more than 7 x 107 m3 has melted in the crater (Reference Benson and MotykaBenson and Motyka, 1978; Reference MotykaMotyka, 1983, Reference Benson, Motyka, Bingham, Wharton, MacKeith, Sturm, Kotlyakov, Vinogradov and Glaz-ovskiyBenson and others, 1985; Reference Benson and FollettBenson and Follett, 1986). Some of the meltwater percolated into the hot rocks of the crater floor and increased the local heat flux by forming hydrothermal convection cells; some was lost to the atmosphere as steam (Reference MotykaMotyka, 1983), and some ran off as subglacier flow at the rock/ice interface. When melting exceeded the removal processes, a lake would form in the crater, such as happened in 1974, 1979, 1981 and 1983.
The increased heating was strongly focused under the North Crater and on the northeast flank of the volcano near the crater. Changes in ice-surface contours measured in 1961, 1965 and 1975 (Reference BinghamBingham, 1967; Reference BensonBenson, 1968; Reference MotykaMotyka, 1983) show that the snow-surface elevation in the summit caldera did not change (±1m). The same measurements indicate that heating extended about 0.5 km from the North Crater rim on its northeast side. Due to the local topography, most of the subglacial meltwater produced by volcanic heating outside the crater probably drained down the northeast flank of the mountain.
Between the end of the 19th century and 1957 when aerial mapping photographs were taken, there was a general retreat of all the glaciers on Mount Wrangell. Comparison of the USGS maps made from the 1957 photographs with plane-table maps made in 1902 (Reference MendenhallMendenhall, 1905) show that most of the glaciers retreated between 100 and 400 m (e.g. see Fig. 2). The MacKeith Glaciers on the northeast flank of the volcano were unusual because they retreated 3–5 times further during the same period (Fig. 3). When first observed in 1902 (Reference MendenhallMendenhall, 1905), they were confluent with Ahtna Glacier, which was connected to Betseli Glacier. The deglaciated area is now covered by thin, discontinuous ice-cored moraine with kettle lakes, sparse vegetation and lichen cover consistent with recent déglaciation (Reference SturmSturm, 1983). (MacKeith, Ahtna and Betseli are unofficial names.) The reliability of the 1902 maps has been checked by comparing topographic features depicted on the map with the same features shown on the 1957 USGS maps prepared from aerial photographs. There is good agreement between maps, suggesting that 1902 terminus positions are reliable to ± 250 m.
The hypsometric characteristics (distribution of area with altitude) of the MacKeith Glaciers are also unusual (Fig. 4). Because they are unconfined by valley walls, they have hypsometric curves that are similar to those of a piedmont-lobe glacier (Reference AhlmannAhlmann, 1948). Their areal maximum occurs at an altitude that is slightly higher than the equilibrium-line altitude (ELA). Consequently, they are likely to be sensitive to small shifts in the ELA resulting from climate change. The other glaciers on Mount Wrangell, including Ahtna Glacier on the northeast flank (Fig. 3), and the Chctaslina Glaciers on the west flank (Fig. 2), have hypsometric curves (Fig. 4) which are similar to those of typical valley glaciers (Reference AhlmannAhlmann, 1948).
About 1965, the South, Center and North MacKeith Glaciers, and the 30 km long Ahtna Glacier (Fig. 1 and 3) began to advance and have continued to do so for the past 25 years. While these glaciers, which are adjacent to one another and flow directly from the active North Crater, have been advancing, all other glaciers on Mount Wrangell and on nearby Mount Sanford (4950 m) have remained stationary or continued to retreat. Photographs show that MacKeith and Ahtna Glaciers had retreated to their minimum positions by the 1940s. They were nearly stationary from the 1940s to the 1960s, then in 1965 (±2 years) they began to advance. North MacKeith Glacier, which flows from an accumulation area that is only partly on Mount Wrangell, with about half its accumulation coming from nearby Mount Sanford (Reference SturmSturm, 1983) advanced about 300m between 1957 and 1981, but has been stationary since that time. The other three glaciers on the northeast flank have advanced 320–480 m in the past 25 years. Average rates of advance measured by comparing orthophoto maps, terrestrial surveying and comparison of satellite images are given in Table 1. The start of these advances coincided with the abrupt increase in volcanic heating of the North Crater.
In summary, in 1902 the glaciers on the northeast flank of Mount Wrangell were 1–2 km advanced from their present positions. The ice was probably quite thin and debris-laden. Between 1902 and the 1940s the MacKeith Glaciers retreated, leaving behind a thin, ice-cored moraine. Other glaciers on the mountainretreated during the same period, but a much smaller distance. About 1965, the glaciers which flow from the vicinity of the North Crater began to advance and have continued to do so to the present day. No other glaciers in the Wrangell Mountains have shown similar behavior. The start of these advances coincided with an abrupt increase in volcanic heating of the North Crater.
Terminus Advance and Retreat Due to Tide-Water Interactions in College Fjord
College Fjord, a 40 km long fiord in the northwest part of Prince William Sound, cuts into the heart of the Chugach Mountains (inset, Fig. 1) and contains five tide-water glaciers, five large valley glaciers and dozens of smaller glaciers (Fig. 5). The glaciers of College Fjord have been described by Reference GilbertGilbert (1903), Reference Tarr and MartinTarr and Martin (1914) and Reference FieldField (1932a,Reference Fieldb). A summary of all historical references to glaciers in College Fjord and an extensive discussion of their terminus behavior was prepared by Reference FieldField (1975). The two largest tide-water glaciers in the fiord are Harvard and Yale Glaciers. They are derived from the same snowfields, which connect with the snowfields of Columbia Glacier (Fig. 5). Four other glaciers in the fiord (Wellesley, Vassar, Bryn Mawr and Smith Glaciers) descend the west wall of the fiord to the sea. Observations show that Harvard Glacier has advanced, while there has been a simultaneous retreat of Yale Glacier, with the retreat rate more than twice the advance rate.
Harvard Glacier has been advancing since 1905, and possibly earlier (Fig. 6). It was seen from a distance of about 20 km and mapped by Whidbey in 1794 and by Applegate in 1887 (Reference Tarr and MartinTarr and Martin, 1914; Reference FieldField, 1975). Members of the Harriman expedition, who were able to get closer, photographed and described the glacier in detail (Reference GilbertGilbert, 1903), but the first reliable maps were prepared by Reference Grant and HigginsGrant and Higgins (1913) in 1905 and 1909. It was mapped again in 1910 (Reference Tarr and MartinTarr and Martin, 1914) and 1914 (Reference KeenKeen, 1915). This record has been extended by surveys which were begun by one of the authors (W. O. F.) in 1931 and continued every few years to the present. Comparison of maps and descriptions suggests that the terminus was nearly stationary between 1887 and 1905. In 1905, it began to advance. In 1935, it was still advancing and knocking over 250 year-old trees (Reference CooperCooper, 1942; Reference Viereck, Wright and OsburnViereck, 1968), indicating that it had not been that far advanced since at least 1685. The advance was continuing when the glacier was surveyed in July 1989. Between 1905 and 1969, it advanced at an average rate of 12–20 m a−1 (Reference FieldField, 1975; Reference Brown, Meier and PostBrown and others, 1982; Reference Meier and PostMeier and Post, 1987); since 1969, its rate has averaged 18–30 m a−1 (Table 2)
Yale Glacier has been retreating since the early 19th century (Fig. 6). In 1794, when College Fjord was first visited, Whidbey of Vancouver’s expedition was unable to proceed more than 5 km up the fiord due to floating ice. In 1887, Applegate got about the same distance (near the present-day Coghill Point) (Reference Tarr and MartinTarr and Martin, 1914; Reference FieldField, 1975). From these observations, it is reasonable to conclude that rapid calving was taking place from a large tide-water glacier, probably Yale Glacier. Botanical evidence (Reference CooperCooper, 1942; Reference ViereckViereck, unpublished) suggests that Yale Glacier reached its maximum advance sometime between Whidbey’s and Applegate’s visits. At that time, the terminus was located near the entrance of Yale Arm at College Point (Fig. 5). By 1910, when Reference Tarr and MartinTarr and Martin (1914) mapped its terminus, Yale Glacier had retreated between 3.5 and 5 km. The thick alder growth in front of the glacier suggested that most of the retreat had occurred before 1860. Between 1910 and 1957, Yale Glacier had a complex history (Reference FieldField, 1975) with a net retreat of 0.5 km.
In 1957, the glacier began a rapid retreat which continued unabated until about 1987. Retreat rates during this period were highly variable (Table 3). In July 1989, the terminus of Yale Glacier had retreated so far that it could not be surveyed from the existing control points. Therefore, the most recent terminus positions of Yale Glacier shown in Figure 6 are based (a) on satellite imagery for 1985, (b) on observations and terrestrial photographs taken in 1989, and (c) data from vertical aerial photographs taken in 1987 and 1990 supplied by A. Post (personal communication, 1991). By 1974, Yale Glacier had retreated into a reach of the fiord which was only half as wide as the reach it occupied prior to 1974; according to Reference MercerMercer (1961), this should have caused a decrease in the retreat rate. Instead, its retreat rate accelerated, reaching a maximum value of 345 m a−1 between 1974 to 1978 (Table 3). This was apparently due to the greater water depth in this reach of the fiord (personal communication from A. Post), which caused a higher rate of calving. We think it is unlikely that Yale Glacier will continue to retreat much longer. The active calving terminus is only a few hundred meters downglacier from a distinct rise in the glacier surface, indicating a step in the subglacial topography. The glacier has probably reached its stable retracted position.
The smaller glaciers in College Fjord (Wellesley, Vassar, Bryn Mawr and Smith Glaciers) reached their maximum positions at the end of the 19th century, as did Yale Glacier (Reference FieldField, 1975). Since that time, they have undergone modest retreat punctuated by small advances. Around 1910, all four glaciers experienced a small advance. In the mid-1930s, Bryn Mawr and Wellesley Glaciers experienced another small advance; these same two glaciers, along with Smith Glacier, experienced a third advance in the late 1960s. Our most recent observations suggest that Bryn Mawr Glacier has advanced since last observed in 1976, while the others have shown little change.
Discussion
The advance of the glaciers on the northeast flank of Mount Wrangell does not appear to be the result of climate change. We suspect that volcanic meltwater has changed the basal conditions of these glaciers, changing their flow dynamics and thereby resulting in their advance. It is only glaciers flowing from the northeast side of the North Crater that are advancing, and they began to advance in 1965 when volcanic activity and the abundance of meltwater in the North Crater increased. Changes in ice-surface contours indicate that most run-off from subglacial melting outside the crater would flow down the northeast flank.
There is other supporting evidence: volcanically produced subglacial run-off is not subject to seasonal variation, as is surface run-off; therefore we would expect to see little seasonal variation in the flow characteristics of the glaciers which are advancing, and that is indeed the case. The glaciers on the northeast flank of Mount Wrangell show little or no seasonal variation in surface speed. In contrast, Chetaslina Glacier on the west side of Mount Wrangell shows more than a 50% increase in surface speed during the spring and summer (Reference SturmSturm, 1983). Chetaslina Glacier is closer to the “normal” mode of glacier flow, showing an increase in speed in spring and summer when surface run-off penetrates to the bed of the glacier and increases sliding (Reference SturmSturm, 1983; Reference Echelmeyer and HarrisonEchelmeyer and Harrison, 1990).
It is true that the MacKeith Glaciers have the type of hypsometry which makes them sensitive to changes in climate (Fig. 4). Their configuration favors a more pronounced terminus retreat if the altitude of the equilibrium line shifts upward, and a greater advance if it shifts down than would be observed for a normal valley glacier. We speculate that this is why the MacKeith Glaciers retreated 2—4 times farther than the other glaciers on Mount Wrangell during the climatically induced general retreat between 1902 and the 1940s. However, the hypsometry cannot explain the recent advance of glaciers on the northeast flank of Mount Wrangell. Ahtna Glacier, which has a “normal” hypsometry that is similar to that of Chetaslina Glacier (Fig. 4) is advancing, while Chetaslina Glacier is not. Our conclusion is that the recent volcanic activity on Mount Wrangell is the cause of the advance of all the glaciers on the northeast flank of the volcano.
The striking contrast between the terminus behavior of Yale and Harvard Glaciers, which parallel each other in the same fiord and are derived from the same snowfield (Fig. 5), supports the hypothesis that their terminus behavior is largely the result of dynamic rather than climatic controls. If climate was controling the terminus behavior, we would expect more synchronous behavior between the two glaciers. With a shared accumulation area, their mass balance must be roughly the same. Their lengths are comparable, hence their response times to changes in mass balance should be roughly equal. Yet their terminus behavior has been distinctly opposite for greater than 100 years, suggesting dynamic control.
In general, the terminus positions of tide-water glaciers are thought to be the result of a complex interaction of fiord depth, ice thickness and calving rate, with climate and mass balance playing a secondary role. Recognition of a distinct cycle of dynamically contraled advance and retreat of tide-water glaciers began with the work of Reference HoppeHoppe (1959) and was developed by Reference PostPost (1975) and Reference Meier and PostMeier and Post (1987). The tide-water glacier cycle consists of three phases:
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(1) A period of slow advance (advancing 20–40 m a−1) during which the glacier moves down the fiord through deep water by maintaining a submarine moraine shoal in front of the terminus. This shoal, which is moved in front of the glacier by continuous erosion on the proximal side and deposition on the distal side, greatly reduces iceberg calving, thereby maintaining the glacier in a positive mass balance.
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(2) A period of relative stability during which the terminus is nearly stationary, terminating in shallow water on a submarine moraine. Again, calving is reduced, and calving, ablation and accumulation are in approximate balance.
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(3) A period of rapid “catastrophic” retreat ( 100-2000 ma−1), during which the terminus retreats off its submarine moraine shoal into deep water. This produces calving at a high rate which causes the terminus to retreat up the fiord. The high rate of calving overwhelms the ability of the glacier to supply ice to the terminus, and the retreat continues until the glacier stabilizes on another submarine shoal or becomes grounded at the head of the fiord, where it can begin building another terminal moraine.
Though the cycle listed above may be triggered by climatic change, at any given time the terminus position of the glacier is primarily controled by the balance between glacier flow and calving activity and the phase of cycle. Yale Glacier appears to be near the completion of the catastrophic retreat phase; Harvard Glacier is in the advancing phase.
Conclusions
Though the advance and retreat of glaciers can be good indicators of climate, non-climatically induced changes, such as surging and the examples presented here, are often larger than those produced by climate. It is important to understand and consider these phenomena when interpreting glacier behavior as a climatic indicator.
Acknowledgements
Hundreds of people have been involved in collecting the more than 50 years of field data we have presented here and we thank them all. In the most recent surveys and in preparing this paper we had help from C. F. Benson, the late P. MacKeith, R. Motyka, D. Solie, B. Sturm and C. Tobin. A. Post generously supplied data showing the 1987 and 1990 positions of Yale Glacier and suggested the reason for its increased retreat rate in 1974. We also thank W. M. Kovalick for processing the Landsat data.
The accuracy of references in the text and in this list is the responsibility of the authors, to whom queries should be addressed.