Jökull


Jökull - 01.01.2012, Side 157

Jökull - 01.01.2012, Side 157
Surge fingerprinting of cirque glaciers The recent surge history of the Búrfellsjökull glacier is known (Figure 3) whereas less is known about the Teigarjökull glacier (Brynjólfsson, 2009). The first known surge of Búrfellsjökull occurred in 1912 (Björnsson, 1991; Hallgrímsson, 1972). At first, local farmers noticed how the color of the river com- ing from the glacier changed from being relatively clear to brownish, and remained so through the sum- mer. The farmers discovered that the muddy coloring of the water was caused by a rapid advance (surge) of Búrfellsjökull. A small terminal moraine shows on aerial pho- tographs from 1960, where as this moraine does not show on aerial photographs from 1946. Licheno- metric dating of moraines in front of Búrfellsjökull (Kugelmann, 1991) dates this moraine back to about 1955. On the photograph from 1960, it is clear that the glacier margin has separated from the moraine, indi- cating some years of glacier retreat since the moraine was formed. Monitoring of Búrfellsjökull since the last surge terminated in 2004 suggests that it takes 3– 5 years before the glacier margin separates from the surge moraine. Based on this, we believe the moraine to have formed by surge between 1950 and 1955. The Búrfellsjökull glacier surged in 2001–2004 and overrode the 1950–1955 moraine. The surge oc- curred few years subsequent to a period, 1970–1995, when most glaciers in Iceland advanced or were in balance (Jóhannesson and Sigurðsson, 1998; Sigurðs- son, 2005). These three surges of Búrfellsjökull in- dicate a quiescent period of approximately 50 years between surges. There are two older moraines outside the 1912 moraine (Figure 3), dated from around 1825 and 1890 (Kugelmann, 1991). Due to reported surge activity and similar geomorphology as the younger moraines, we consider the older moraines also to have been formed by surges. The only surge reported from Teigarjökull (Figure 4) occurred in 1971 (Hallgrímsson, 1972), early in the 1970–1995 period of generally advancing glaciers in Iceland (Jóhannesson and Sigurðsson, 1998; Sigurðs- son, 2005). There are four moraines outside the 1971 moraine. Two of them, dated to approximately 1870– 1890 (Kugelmann, 1991), have comparable geomor- phology to the moraines in front of Búrfellsjökull that was formed by surges. Therefore these moraines are considered to have been formed by a surge around 1870–1890. METHODS Geomorphological and sedimentological data on the Búrfellsjökull and Teigarjökull glaciers were col- lected by remote sensing methods and field obser- vations. Landforms such as terminal moraines, me- dial moraines and hummocky moraines are distin- guishable on aerial photographs and their distribution was verified in the field. Distribution of crevasse-fill ridges and flutes were mapped in the field. Dead-ice is widespread in the glacier forefields, and it is diffi- cult, with surface exploration only, to identify dead- ice within the sediments in front of the glaciers. How- ever, by evaluating the stability of the surface and map landforms that indicate dead-ice melting, e.g. cracks, backslumping, furrows and troughs, sinkholes, and hummocky surfaces, it was possible to estimate the extent of the dead-ice. By studying time series of aerial photographs, we improved the existing surge history of the glaciers. A geomorphological map, in the scale 1:13 000, of the forefield of Teigarjökull and Búrfellsjökull glaciers was produced in a Geo- graphical Information System (GIS) using aerial pho- tographs as base. To investigate the differences between surge-type and non-surge type cirque glaciers, the forefield of the non-surge- type glacier Deildarjökull (Figure 1) was also explored. The observational data was used for constraining a conceptual landsystem model for surg- ing cirque glaciers, explaining how the glacier snout and forefield developed over a surge cycle. The Kugelmann (1991) lichenometric dating of terminal moraines was used for better constraining the chronology of the different surges. RESULTS Sediments and landforms The alpine landscape setting of the cirque glaciers on the Tröllaskagi peninsula causes the debris cas- cade and sedimentary environments there to differ considerably from those prevailing at the major outlet JÖKULL No. 62, 2012 155
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