ARCHIVE: Landscape and water resource evolution in areas of debris-covered ice

Graduate student preparing to make measurements on debris-covered glacier

THIS PROJECT IS NO LONGER ACTIVE.

In many parts of the upper midwest, the greatest extent of the Late Wisconsinan ice sheet advance is marked by broad belts of high-relief hummocky landscape. This kind of terrain is thought to have formed as the slow-moving or stagnant ice margins melted non-uniformly beneath a thickening blanket of supraglacial sediment. Similar processes may be occurring on some modern valley glaciers, whose recent thinning has been accompanied by mass wasting from newly-exposed valley walls. We have sought to model the coupled heat transfer and short-range sediment transport processes in these settings to better understand wastage of debris-covered ice and its paleoclimatic and contemporary water-resource implications. This project has involved computer modeling, remote sensing, and field studies of contemporary de-icing at Emmons Glacier on the northeast face of Mount Rainier, Washington, which is partly blanketed with supraglacial debris.

Related Publications

Moore, P.L., 2021, Numerical simulation of debris mobility: implications for ablation and landform genesisFrontiers in Earth Science, doi: 10.3389/feart.2021.710131.

Moore, P.L., L.I. Nelson, and T.M.D. Groth, 2019, Debris properties and mass-balance impacts on adjacent debris-covered glaciers, Mount Rainier, USAArctic, Antarctic and Alpine Research, v. 51(1), p. 70-83. doi:10.1080/15230430.2019.1582269.

Moore, P.L. 2018, Stability of supraglacial debrisEarth Surface Processes and Landforms, v. 48(1), p. 285-297. doi: 10.1002/esp.4244.

Moore, P.L., L.I. Nelson, and T.M. Dits, 2014, Melting the rocky terminus of Emmons GlacierScience Brief - Mount Rainier National Park, 2p.

Related Resources

DCGsimulation. A GitHub repository with Matlab code for modeling melt and local debris redistribution on debris-covered glaciers. 

Contacts: Pete Moore