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Relation between the Mass Balance of Western Canadian Mountain Glaciers and Meteorological Data

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Anne Letréguilly*
Affiliation:
National Hydrology Research Institute, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan S7N 3H5, Canada
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Abstract

The mass balance, summer balance, winter balance, and equilibrium-line altitude of three Canadian glaciers (Peyto, Place, and Sentinel Glaciers) are compared with the meteorological records of neighbouring stations for the period 1966—84. While Peyto Glacier’s mass balance is almost entirely related to summer temperature, Sentinel Glacier’s mass balance is mostly controlled by winter precipitation. Place Glacier is influenced by both elements. Statistical reconstructions are presented for the three glaciers, using the best regression equations with the meteorological records since 1938.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1988
Figure 0

Table.1. Glaciological measurements on the three glaciers studied and simple statistical description of the series

Figure 1

Table.2. Correlation coefficients of the meteorological data of seven stations with the annual mass balance of peyto glacier for the period 1966─84. blanks indicate a coefficient below the 5% significance level. the meteorological data on peyto glacier are 12 years long (1967—78) and the station was only operated in the summer

Figure 2

Fig.1. Location of glaciers and meteorological stations used in this study

Figure 3

Fig.2. Glaciological and hydrological measurements on Peyto Glacier (annual. winter and summer balance, equilibrium-line altitude, and run-off from glacier stream) and temperature series of neighbouring meteorological stations of the Canadian Rockies. The scale of the temperature is reversed (negative values up) to facilitate the comparison with Peyto Glacier mass balance (drawn with a □). since a positive mass balance corresponds to a low summer temperature. The most interesting temperature series have been plotted (from Banff, Jasper. Lake Louise, and Peyto station, near the glacier).t5→7 stands for the mean of the monthly minimum temperature of May, June, and July. T5→7 is the maximum temperature averaged over the same period of time, and P5→7 is the cumulative precipitation of May, June, and July. Bw is the winter balance. Ba the annual balance, and bs the summer balance.

Figure 4

Table.3. Correlation coefficients between peyto glacier glaciological data and climatological data from three stations for different periods of time

Figure 5

Fig.3. Mass balance of Place Glacier (O) and Sentinel Glacier (*). and meteorological series from Vancouver and Atta Lake for the period 1966—84. t5→7 stands for the mean of the monthly minimum temperature of May. June, and July. T5→7 is the maximum temperature averaged over the same period of time, and P5→7 is the cumulative precipitation of May. June, and July. Ba is the annual balance.

Figure 6

Table.4. Correlation coefficients between place glacier glaciological data and vancouver and alta lake meteorological variables for the period 1966–84 (summary of the most significant results). blanks mean the value is below the 5% significance level. tJul-Aug, tJul-Sep, tAug-Sep ARE OMITTED BECAUSE THEY SHOW NO SIGNIFICANT RESULT

Figure 7

Table.5. Correlation coefficients between sentinel glacier glaciological data and vancouver and alta lake meteorological variables for the period 1966–84 (summary of the most significant results). blanks mean the value is below the 5% significance level. minimum temperatures are omitted because they show no significant result

Figure 8

Fig.4. Cumulative mass balance of Peyto Glacier (1966—84) and reconstructions obtained with Jasper and Banff summer temperature (1938—84). The regression equations used are:where t5→7is the sum of the mean monthly minimum temperature of May, June, and July.

Figure 9

Fig.5. Cumulative mass balance of Sentinel Glacier (1966—84) and reconstruction obtained with Vancouver meteorological data, using the regression equation:where P10→5 is the cumulative monthly precipitation from October to May, and t5→8 is the cumulative mean monthly minimum from May to August.

Figure 10

Fig.6. Cumulative mass balance of Place Glacier (1966—84) and reconstruction obtained with Vancouver meteorological data using the regression equation:where P10→5 is the cumulative monthly precipitation from Ocloher to May, and t5→8 is the cumulative mean monthly minimum from May to August.