Jökull


Jökull - 01.01.2019, Side 107

Jökull - 01.01.2019, Side 107
Tussetschläger et al. rock glaciers in Tröllaskagi can be differentiated in moraine- and talus-derived landforms, and their ac- tivity includes both intact and relict rock glaciers (Lilleøren et al., 2013; Tanarro et al., 2019). The MAAT in coastal areas of northern Iceland at sea level was 2 to 3◦C between 1971 and 2000 (Tveito et al., 2000). On the Tröllaskagi peninsula the estimated MAAT ranges between 2 to 4◦C at the coast, and -4 to -2◦C at the summits for the period from 1940 until 1970 (Einarsson, 1984). The estimated mean precip- itation increases from 1000–1500 mm in the coastal areas up to 2000–2500 mm at higher elevations. How- ever, precipitation in some inland valleys of the penin- sula is less than half the precipitation in areas close to the sea (Crochet et al., 2007; Brynjólfsson and Ólafs- son, 2009). Frequent cloud cover on available satellite images over the Tröllaskagi peninsula made it necessary to fo- cus on six sub-regions (Figure 1). Region 1 is called Almenningar, a mountain slope of variable steepness extending from the open sea up to 750 m a.s.l. on the west side of the northernmost part of the Tröllaskagi peninsula. A big landslide extends from the upper- most part of the mountain slope down to the ocean. Slow downward movements or faltering of parts of the landform occur in anomalously wet periods, dur- ing which the stability and the substrate conditions of the landform seem to be affected (Sæmundsson et al., 2004), However, Guðmundsson (2000) described the same landform as an active rock glacier and suggested that the movement relates to its internal ice conditions. Region 2, Úlfsdalir, opposite to the first region Al- menningar, is located on the east side of the moun- tain ridge between the areas in a north facing valley bottom about 400–900 m a.s.l. Small debris flows and rockfall apparently affect the steepest and uppermost part of the valley bottom which otherwise is charac- terised by gentle topography and morphology. Re- gion 3, the valley Brimnesdalur, is a north facing val- ley surrounded by peaks reaching about 1100 m a.s.l. At the head of the valley is the Brimnesjökull glacier with an area of about 0.63 km2, almost half of which is debris covered. Several distinct landforms were observed during fieldwork, especially in the moun- tains on the east side of the valley, both relative old morainic features and debris piles or moraines that seem fresh and ice cored even though they do not cor- relate with the present glacier. Region 4 is the Kerl- ing area, a small northeast facing cirque located on the east side of the mountain Kerling about 35 km in- land from the first three regions. The high and steep back walls of the cirque reach up to 1200 m a.s.l. and are the main source for a small talus-derived, tongue- shaped rock glacier situated on the cirque bottom be- tween 800–1000 m a.s.l. Region 5 is the Búrfellsdalur valley, a north facing valley, tributary of the main val- ley Svarfaðardalur, located about two kilometres west of the Kerling area. Búrfellsjökull glacier is located at the head of the valley between 750–1220 m a.s.l., the surrounding mountains reach 1200–1300 m a.s.l. The size of the mostly debris free-glacier is currently about 1.3 km2. A prominent debris lobe feature originat- ing below a steep talus-characterised mountain slope proximal to the glacier margin on the west side of the valley was mapped by Brynjólfsson et al. (2012). The landform extends from about 900 down to 700 m a.s.l. and at least the upper half contains ice. Fresh cracks and surface morphology indicate a slow downward movement of the landform. Region 6 is the Sakka area, extending from 160–920 m a.s.l., on the west side of the mountain above the farm Sakka. A promi- nent landslide is located in the northernmost part of this area. Observations of the surface morphology in the uppermost part of the landslide, e.g. fresh cracks, hollows and ridges indicate considerable movement of at least the upper part of the landslide. MATERIALS AND METHODS Dataset Optical satellite images from Sentinel-2 and Landsat- 5/-7/-8, aerial images (acquired by Landmælingar Ís- lands), orthophotos (acquired by Loftmyndir) and a digital elevation model were used as input for the classification of perennial snow patches. Suitable Sentinel-2 and Landsat-5/-7/-8 images for the Trölla- skagi Peninsula were ranked based on suitable illu- mination conditions and cloud cover. For the classi- fication we used only images acquired at the end of summer, when most of the snow from previous winter 106 JÖKULL No. 69, 2019
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