Ice elevation and areal changes of glaciers from the Northern Patagonia Icefield, Chile
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Rivera Ibáñez, Sergio
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Ice elevation and areal changes of glaciers from the Northern Patagonia Icefield, Chile
Abstract
High thinning rates (up to −4.0±0.97 m a−1) have been measured at Campo de Hielo Patagónico Norte (CHN) or Northern
Patagonia Icefield, Chile between 1975 and 2001. Results have been obtained by comparing a Digital Elevation Model (DEM)
derived from regular cartography compiled by Instituto Geográfico Militar of Chile (IGM) based upon 1974/1975 aerial
photographs and a DEM generated from Advanced Space-borne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) satellite
images acquired in September 2001. A complete cloud-free Landsat ETM+ satellite image mosaic acquired in March 2001 was
used to update the available glacier inventory of the CHN, including all glaciers larger than 0.5 km2 (48 new glaciers). A new
delineation of ice divides was also performed over the accumulation areas of glaciers sharing the high plateau where the existing
regular cartography exhibits poor coverage of topographic information. This updated glacier inventory produced a total ice area for
2001 of 3953 km2, which represents a decrease of 3.4±1.5% (140±61 km2 of ice) with respect to the total ice area of the CHN in
1979 calculated from a Landsat MSS satellite image. Almost 62% of the total area change between 1979 and 2001 took place in
glaciers located at the western margin of the CHN, where the maximum area loss was experienced by Glaciar San Quintín with
33 km2. At the southern margin, Glaciar Steffen underwent the largest ice-area loss (12 km2 or 2.6% of the 1979 area), whilst at the
eastern margin the greatest area loss took place in Glaciares Nef (7.9 km2, 5.7% of the 1979 area) and Colonia (9.1 km2, 2.7% of
the 1979 area). At the northern margin of the CHN the lower debris-covered ablation area of Glaciar Grosse collapsed into a new
freshwater lake formed during the late 1990s. The areal changes measured at the CHN are much larger than previously estimated
due to the inclusion of changes experienced in the accumulation areas. The CHN as a whole is contributing melt water to global sea
level rise at rates ∼25% higher than previous estimates.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/153299
DOI: doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2006.11.037
ISSN: 09218181
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Global and Planetary Change 59 (2007) 126–137
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