Water Stewardship Information Sources

ID 2811
Citation Tennant, C. Menounos, B. and Wheate, R., and Clague, J., 2012. Glacier Change in the Canadian Rocky Mountains, 1919 to 2006. The Cryosphere 6, 1541-1552. doi:10.5194/tc-6-1541-2012
Organization University of Northern British Columbia; Simon Fraser University
URL http://www.the-cryosphere.net/6/1541/2012/
Abstract/Description or Keywords Glaciers in the Canadian Rocky Mountains constitute an important freshwater resource. To enhance our understanding of the influence climate and local topography have on glacier area, large numbers of glaciers of different sizes and attributes need to be monitored over periods of many decades. We used Interprovincial Boundary Commission Survey (IBCS) maps of the Alberta–British Columbia (BC) border (1903–1924), BC Terrain Resource Information Management (TRIM) data (1982–1987), and Landsat Thematic Mapper (TM) and Enhanced Thematic Mapper (ETM+) imagery (2000–2002 and 2006) to document planimetric changes in glacier cover in the central and southern Canadian Rocky Mountains between 1919 and 2006. Over this period, glacier cover in the study area decreased by 590Ī70 km2 (40Ī5 %), 17 of 523 glaciers disappeared and 124 glaciers fragmented into multiple ice masses. Glaciers smaller than 1.0 km2 experienced the greatest relative area loss (64Ī8 %), and relative area loss is more variable with small glaciers, suggesting that the local topographic setting controls the response of these glaciers to climate change. Small glaciers with low slopes, low mean/median elevations, south to west aspects, and high insolation experienced the largest reduction in area. Similar rates of area change characterize the periods 1919–1985 and 1985–2001; _6.3Ī0.6 km2 yr_1 (_0.4Ī0.1%yr_1) and _5.0Ī0.5 km2 yr_1 (_0.5Ī0.1%yr_1), respectively. The rate of area loss, however, increased over the period 2001–2006; _19.3Ī2.4 km2 yr_1 (_2.0Ī0.2%yr_1). Applying size class-specific scaling factors, we estimate a total reduction in glacier cover in the central and southern Canadian Rocky Mountains for the period 1919–2006 of 750 km2 (30 %).
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