naito_etal_2001.html
Bulletin of Glaciological Research 18 (2001) 1-8
©Japanese Society of Snow and Ice
Response sensitivities of a summer-accumulation type glacier to climate changes indicated with a glacier fluctuation model
Nozomu NAITO1,
Yutaka AGETA1,
Masayoshi NAKAWO1,
Edwin D. WADDINGTON2,
Charles F. RAYMOND2
and Howard CONWAY2
1 Institute for Hydrospheric-Atmospheric
Sciences, Nagoya University, Nagoya 464-8601 JAPAN
2 Geophysics Program, University of Washington, Box 351650,
Seattle, Washington 98195-1650 USA
Abstract
Sensitivities of a summer-accumulation type glacier in
response to changes in air temperature and precipitation are
investigated using a glacier fluctuation model. The model couples
glacier dynamics to empirical mass balance equations obtained for
a typical summer-accumulation type glacier in the eastern Nepal
Himalayas. The geometry and seasonal variations in air
temperature and precipitation are simplified in order to examine
the principal characteristics of the sensitivities. The magnitude
of the volume change and the volume response time are discussed
and compared with those for a hypothetical winter-accumulation
type glacier of equivalent geometry.
The volume change of a summer-accumulation type glacier is
roughly twice as large in its magnitude for an air temperature
change as for an equally probable precipitation change in east
Nepal. Moreover, the volume response time of the glacier is
shorter for the temperature change than for the precipitation
change. Accordingly, we suggest that air temperature changes
rather than precipitation changes are mainly responsible for the
fluctuations of summer-accumulation type glaciers in east Nepal,
as long as the likelihood of future shifts in air temperature and
precipitation scale with their modern standard deviations. The
summer-accumulation type glacier responds more quickly to a
temperature change than does the winter-accumulation type
glacier, and its magnitude of the volume response is smaller for
a precipitation change than the winter-accumulation type glacier.
There is a significant shortening of the response time for
increasing magnitude of glacier shrinkage.