Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-wzw2p Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-18T20:40:18.348Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Post-Little Ice Age glacial lake evolution in Svalbard: inventory of lake changes and lake types

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 June 2023

Iwo Wieczorek*
Affiliation:
Department of Environmental Sciences, Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Sogndal, Norway Alfred Jahn Cold Regions Research Centre, University of Wroclaw, Wroclaw, Poland
Mateusz C. Strzelecki
Affiliation:
Alfred Jahn Cold Regions Research Centre, University of Wroclaw, Wroclaw, Poland
Łukasz Stachnik
Affiliation:
Alfred Jahn Cold Regions Research Centre, University of Wroclaw, Wroclaw, Poland German Research Centre for Geosciences, GFZ, Potsdam, Germany
Jacob C. Yde
Affiliation:
Department of Environmental Sciences, Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Sogndal, Norway
Jakub Małecki
Affiliation:
Cryosphere Research Group, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań, Poland
*
Corresponding author: Iwo Wieczorek; Email: iwo.wieczorek@uwr.edu.pl
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

The rapid formation of glacial lakes is one of the most conspicuous landscape changes caused by atmospheric warming in glacierised regions. However, relatively little is known about the history and current state of glacial lakes in the High Arctic. This study aims to address this issue by providing the first inventory of glacial lakes in Svalbard, focusing in particular on the post-Little Ice Age evolution of glacial lakes and their typology. To do so, we used aerial photographs and satellite imagery together with archival topographic data from 1936 to 2020. The inventory comprises the development of 566 glacial lakes (146 km2) that were still in direct contact with glaciers during the period 2008–2012. The results show a consistent increase in the total area of glacial lakes from the 1930s to 2020 and suggest an apparent link between climatic and geological factors, and the formation of specific lake dam types: moraine, ice, or bedrock. We also detected 134 glacial lake drainage events that have occurred since the 1930s. This study shows that Svalbard has one of the highest rates of glacial lake development in the world, which is an indicator of the overall dynamics of landscape change in the archipelago in response to climate change.

Type
Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The International Glaciological Society

1. Introduction

Glacial lakes are defined as ‘bodies of water that are influenced by the presence of glaciers’ (Fitzsimons and Howarth, Reference Fitzsimons and Howarth2018). It is important to note that we extend the definition of ‘glacial lake’ to include water bodies that are no longer fed by glacial water as a result of the complete disappearance of glaciers (Yao and others, Reference Yao, Liu, Han and Sun2018). Although this definition embraces supraglacial and subglacial lakes, some authors use the term ‘glacial lakes’ synonymously for lakes situated in proglacial environments. Glacial lakes are often divided into (1) ice-contact lakes and (2) ice-distal lakes (that is, not in direct contact with the glacier). Both types of glacial lakes are fed by glacial meltwater or the melting of inactive glacier ice and/or formed by glacial erosion or damming (Yao and others, Reference Yao, Liu, Han and Sun2018). In a warming climate with glacier retreat, ice-contact lakes are expected to develop into ice-distal lakes as glaciers retreat or disappear completely as a result of drainage (Fitzsimons and Howarth, Reference Fitzsimons and Howarth2018; Emmer and others, Reference Emmer2020, Reference Emmer2022; Shugar and others, Reference Shugar2020; Carrivick and others, Reference Carrivick, Tweed, Sutherland and Mallalieu2020).

Glacial lakes are a component of many glacial landscapes (Carrivick and Tweed, Reference Carrivick and Tweed2013). In recent years, the number, size and volume of glacial lakes have changed rapidly worldwide as a result of climate-forced glacier recession (Veh and others, Reference Veh, Korup, von Specht, Roessner and Walz2019; Shugar and others, Reference Shugar2020). There is also increasing awareness of the potential hazards of glacial lake outburst floods (GLOFs). This interest has led to the compilation of glacial lake inventories in many glacierised regions of the world, such as parts of the Himalaya (Ukita and others, Reference Ukita2011; Jain and others, Reference Jain, Lohani, Singh, Chaudhary and Thakural2012; Govindha Raj and others, Reference Govindha Raj BK, Kumar and Remya2013; Worni and others, Reference Worni, Huggel and Stoffel2013; Zhang and others, Reference Zhang, Yao, Xie, Wang and Yang2015; Govindha Raj and Kumar, Reference Govindha Raj and Kumar2016; Aggarwal and others, Reference Aggarwal, Rai, Thakur and Emmer2017; Chen and others, Reference Chen, Zhang, Tian and Li2017; Prakash and Nagarajan, Reference Prakash and Nagarajan2017; Govindha Khadka and others, Reference Khadka, Zhang and Thakuri2018; Wang and others, Reference Wang2020; Nie and others, Reference Nie2017), the Karakoram Range (Senese and others, Reference Senese2018; Mal and others, Reference Mal, Kumar, Bhambri, Schickhoff and Singh2020), the Tibetan Plateau (Luo and others, Reference Luo, Zhang, Chen and Xu2020), the European Alps (Buckel and others, Reference Buckel, Otto, Prasicek and Keuschnig2018), Greenland (How and others, Reference How2021; Mallalieu and others, Reference Mallalieu, Carrivick, Quincey and Raby2021), Alaska (Post and Mayo, Reference Post and Mayo1970; Rick and others, Reference Rick, Mcgrath, Armstrong and Mccoy2022), the Andes (Loriaux and Casassa, Reference Loriaux and Casassa2013; Wilson and others, Reference Wilson2018) and Scandinavia (Andreassen and others, Reference Andreassen, Nagy, Kjøllmoen and Leigh2022). However, changes to glacial lakes in the High Arctic, where Arctic amplification enhances glacier recession (Rantanen and others, Reference Rantanen2022), have received scant attention in contemporary studies owing to the absence of comprehensive lake inventories and the limited impact of GLOFs on settlements and infrastructure. The present inventory fills a gap in the existing global glacial lake database (Shugar and others, Reference Shugar2020), which generally lacks glacial lake analyses from the High Arctic regions because of the high level of cloud cover and the inferior quality of satellite images. Given the extremely rapid warming of the Barents Sea region (Isaksen and others, Reference Isaksen2022), where Svalbard is situated, we can consider the archipelago as a unique laboratory for climate change impact on glacial environments. An additional aspect emphasising the importance of research in Svalbard is that research conducted in this area has a long history and includes some of the longest observations of environmental change in the entire Arctic.

This study aims to classify and evaluate long-term changes to ice-contact glacial lakes, in the High Arctic of Svalbard since the termination of the Little Ice Age (LIA). We provide a comprehensive inventory of glacial lakes on Svalbard, including an overview of their spatial distribution and temporal changes (1936–2020).

2. Regional setting

The Svalbard archipelago lies between 74° N and 81° N and is surrounded by the Greenland Sea to the west and the Barents Sea to the east (Fig. 1). The archipelago consists of the larger islands Spitsbergen, Nordaustlandet, Edgeøya, Barentsøya, Kvitøya, Prins Karls Forland, Kong Karls Land, Hopen and Bjørnøya, along with several smaller islands. Svalbard is one of the regions in the Arctic where global warming is proceeding apace. The mean annual air temperature has increased by 4°C over the last 40 years (1979–2018) (Nordli and others, Reference Nordli, Przybylak, Ogilvie and Isaksen2014; Isaksen and others, Reference Isaksen2016; Wawrzyniak and Osuch, Reference Wawrzyniak and Osuch2020). The current mean annual air temperature ranges from −5.2°C (Ny-Ålesund, north Spitsbergen) to −4.6°C (Longyearbyen, central Spitsbergen) and −4.3°C (Hopen Island, south-east Svalbard) (Førland and others, Reference Førland, Benestad, Hanssen-Bauer, Haugen and Skaugen2011). The average annual precipitation measured at the airport in Longyearbyen – the longest continuously operating weather station in Svalbard – is ~ 190 mm, and with ongoing climate change, liquid or mixed (liquid-solid) precipitation is becoming more frequent at the expense of solid precipitation (Førland and Hanssen-Bauer, Reference Førland and Hanssen-Bauer2000; Førland and others, Reference Førland, Benestad, Hanssen-Bauer, Haugen and Skaugen2011). Climate projections indicate that the annual air temperature will rise by about 4–7°C, while the annual precipitation is expected to increase by about 45–65% (Moreno-Ibáñez and others, Reference Moreno-Ibáñez, Hagen, Hübner, Lihavainen and Zaborska2020).

Figure 1. Map of Svalbard showing the regions used in this study.

Source: base map from Norwegian Polar Institute and ESRI.

Glaciers cover about 57% of the total area of Svalbard – about 34 000 km2 (Nuth and others, Reference Nuth2013). The area of glaciers has been diminishing almost continuously since the maximum extent of the LIA, which occurred in the late 19th and early 20th centuries (Humlum and others, Reference Humlum, Instanes and Sollid2003; Farnsworth and others, Reference Farnsworth, Ingólfsson, Retelle and Schomacker2016; Małecki, Reference Małecki2016; Noël and others, Reference Noël2020; Schuler and others, Reference Schuler2020; Evans, Reference Evans2011; Sobota and others, Reference Sobota, Nowak and Weckwerth2016; Sobota, Reference Sobota2014). Svalbard is dominated by polythermal glaciers containing cold and temperate ice (Hagen and others, Reference Hagen, Liestøl, Roland and Jørgensen1993; Sevestre and others, Reference Sevestre, Benn, Hulton and Bælum2015). Recent studies indicate that between 1936 and 2010, the total area of glaciers on Svalbard decreased by about 30% and that the mean thinning rates of glaciers varied between 0.3 and 0.5 m year−1, depending on the region (Geyman and others, Reference Geyman, van Pelt, Maloof, Aas and Kohler2022). According to the Randolph Glacier Inventory (Pfeffer and others, Reference Pfeffer2014) about 15% of the area is drained by land-terminating glaciers. This subpopulation, representing about 85% of the total number of glaciers in Svalbard, is potentially capable of producing proglacial lakes as a result of marginal glacier retreat, typically at rates between 5 and 30 m year−1 (e.g. Rachlewicz and others, Reference Rachlewicz, Szczuciński and Ewertowski2007; Małecki, Reference Małecki2016). In recent years, these glaciers have been displaying rapid thinning rates along west Spitsbergen and at Edgeøya (marginal thinning of 3–4 m/year) to more balanced conditions in the north and north-east (marginal thinning of 0.5–1 m year−1) (Małecki, Reference Małecki2022).

The landscape of Svalbard is dominated mountain ranges, separated by deep U-shaped valleys and fjords (Dallmann, Reference Dallmann2015). As a result of post glacial isostatic uplift, wide and relatively flat, raised marine terraces occupy the lower parts of the coastal landscape (Sessford and others, Reference Sessford, Strzelecki and Hormes2015; Strzelecki and others, Reference Strzelecki, Long and Lloyd2017).

Knowledge of glacial lakes and their changes in Svalbard is limited. Well-studied glacial lake Goësvatnet in northern Sørkapp Land ceased to exist in 2001 due to retreat of Gåsbreen and a glacial lake outburst flood (Grzes and Banach, Reference Grześ and Banach1984; Schoner and Schoner, Reference Schoner and Schoner1997; Ziaja and others, Reference Ziaja, Dudek and Ostafin2016; Dudek and others, Reference Dudek, Wieczorek, Suwiński and Strzelecki2022). Other studies of glacial lakes in Svalbard relate to lake sediment records (e.g. Røthe and others, Reference Røthe, Bakke, Støren and Bradley2018; van der Bilt and others, Reference van der Bilt, D'Andrea, Werner and Bakke2019), water biogeochemistry (Holm and others, Reference Holm2012; Ruman and others, Reference Ruman2021) or the development of sedimentological profiles at the bottom of lakes (Rajaram and others, Reference Rajaram, Ganeshkumar and Partheeban2023). Glacial lakes also act as important reservoirs that accumulate sediments from glaciers or Arctic catchments (Kavan and others, Reference Kavan2022). At present, however, there are no data on the number and area of glacial lakes in Svalbard or their spatial distribution and temporal changes.

3. Material and methods

3.1 Data compilation

To produce this inventory of the glacial lakes in Svalbard, we used various sources of remote sensing data (Table 1). Cloud cover was important for the correct identification of glacial lakes. Another factor was the appropriate selection of different data sources, enabling the fullest possible coverage of the whole of Svalbard: for this, we used various databases and aerial photographs. Due to emerging data gaps in individual time periods (resulting, for example, from too much cloud cover), our inventory additionally divided into glacial lakes of which we are able to trace the history of their changes over all the years analysed. This was thus appropriately defined as ‘full coverage record’.

Table 1. Summary of remote sensing data sources and types used to construct the inventory of glacial lakes

3.1.1 1936–1938

The earliest data come from archival aerial photographs taken by the Norwegian Polar Institute (NPI). These are oblique aerial photographs that enable the analysis of the Svalbard landscape between 1936 and 1938 (Norwegian Polar Institute, 2020a, 2020b). The photographs do not cover the entire surface area of Svalbard, however. The most conspicuous data gaps are over the eastern part of the island of Nordaustlandet, which is covered by an ice cap.

The high-resolution images from different angles, obtained along the coasts of Svalbard during this aerial campaign, yielded only scant coverage of the central part of the archipelago. This means that the presence of glacial lakes in the early 20th century cannot be accurately analysed. Additional difficulties are shadows cast by mountains, meteorological conditions such as high cloud cover, and the aircraft's irregular (surface-dependent) flight paths from which the images were taken (Norwegian Polar Institute, 2020a, 2020b). The accuracy of the analysis was enhanced by an orthophotomap created on the basis of 5507 of the photographs from the 1936–1938 aerial campaign (Geyman and others, Reference Geyman, van Pelt, Maloof, Aas and Kohler2022). As the resolution of this map is about 20 m it is not possible to analyse very small glacial lakes (smaller than about 1000 m2). The map also has some georegistration errors (±100 m), which does not allow the positions of individual topographic objects to be precisely interpreted.

By simultaneously analysing the aerial photographs and the orthophotomap, we vectorised the glacial lakes in ArcMap; then, were able to analyse in detail the distribution and basic geometry of some glacial lakes in Svalbard. The smallest of these had an area of 1176 m2 (Table 1). It is possible that lakes smaller than about 1000 m2 existed during this period, but the quality of the available material precluded the inclusion of such small lakes in the inventory.

3.1.2 1990

We gained access to vectorised data from the 1990s from the NPI archive. The data cover the whole of Svalbard, including the state of the glacial lakes in the late 20th century. Data were taken from the Svalbard topographic map 1: 100 000 (Norwegian Polar Institute, 2020a, 2020b). With the marked improvement in the quality of the material on which this analysis was based compared to the previous period, the smallest lake from the 1990s material was 317 m2 in area.

3.1.3 2008–2012

We examined the collection of aerial photos of Svalbard at 0.5 m resolution, taken by NPI during the 2008–2012 campaign, available via the online map service TopoSvalbard (Norwegian Polar Institute, 2020a, 2020b). We applied data from this period as a reference dataset for the inventory. The 2008–2012 campaign covered almost the entire archipelago apart from Torell Land, Wedel Jarlsberg Land, Nathorst Land, Heer Land, and the south-eastern part of Sabine Land, for which no glacial lake vector data from 2008 to 2012 were available. Where such vector data were missing, we analysed the available aerial photographs to obtain information regarding the presence of lakes during this period. The vector data of the period were created using much the same methods as for the 1990s. The accuracy is also based on the available topographic map and aerial photographs, and the smallest lake had an area of 320 m2.

3.1.4 2013–2019

Data from Google Earth Pro yielded information on the state of the Svalbard landscape from 2013 to 2019. The images, derived from Google Earth Pro, free of cloud cover, translated into a mosaic of images compiled from different dates. The surface area and perimeter of individual lakes were directly obtained in Google Earth Pro using available tools. All the results were recorded in a summary table for comparing the evolution of glacial lakes (Table 2). Google Earth Pro mainly uses images from the Maxar and Landsat missions but does not mention the exact technical details of each image (apart from the date the image was taken). Their resolution also varies and is based mainly on the availability of a particular satellite scene and the atmospheric conditions on a given date. Owing to the incomplete satellite image coverage of Svalbard, this period was excluded in the analysis of lake dynamics, but we did include it in the supplementary material and described it briefly in the Results section. Based on the satellite scenes obtained from 2013–2019, the smallest of the inventoried lakes had an area of 145 m2.

Table 2. Glacial lake types in Svalbard (2008–2012) categorised according to the classification schemes by Emmer and others (Reference Emmer, Klimeš, Mergili, Vilímek and Cochachin2016) and Yao and others (Reference Yao, Liu, Han and Sun2018)

3.1.5 2020

The latest data in this study are from satellite images available from the Copernicus Sentinel-2 mission (https://sentinel2explorer.esri.com/). Because of the minimal cloud cover, we chose satellite images taken in August 2020 to obtain information about the state of Svalbard glacial lakes during the warmest month, when the snow cover was also the least. Only satellite images with less than 30% cloud cover were selected. After being checked for georeferencing, the satellite images were stitched together as an orthomosaic. In this way, we were able to review individual sites with potential glacial lakes during the inventory process and, by vectorising the water features found, enter them into the database. The quality of the free data available from Sentinel-2 for such a large area as Svalbard was relatively poor, so we were able to study only some of the glacial lakes indicated in the previous periods. Therefore, the smallest lake with information on the development of the geometry and area of the water bodies analysed had an area of 1439 m2.

In order to reduce the margin of error made when examining these data, we simultaneously analysed the downloaded raster images in ArcMap software (with different resolutions from 10 to 20 m, depending on the region) and the raster images available in the Sentinel web browser with a 10 m resolution. Based on the raster mosaic of satellite scenes for the whole of Svalbard, we vectorised the glacial lakes in ArcMap software, thereby completing the range of quantitative data in this inventory.

3.2 Data processing

We performed the glacier lake analysis in five steps as shown in Figure 2. As a precondition, we focused the analysis on lakes in direct contact with glaciers in 2008–2012. This data series was chosen mainly because of the availability of high-resolution remote sensing data that covered almost the entire archipelago.

Figure 2. Flow chart showing the data compilation and processing.

The first step was to select glacial lakes from among all the water bodies appearing in the NPI topographic objects database from 2008–2012. The automatic selection (ArcMap selection by attributes) was followed by a manual selection, which involved verifying the automatic results with the aid of aerial photos. This enabled supraglacial lakes to be excluded from the database and limited the potential risk of including nonglacial lakes (e.g. coastal lakes and lagoons, tundra lakes, post-glacial valley lakes). This may be a potential source of error when analysing poor-quality remote sensing data. All the analyses were carried out in ArcMap 10.7.1 software.

In the second step, all the glacial lakes identified in 2008–2012 were checked for their presence in the 1930s. Qualitative data describing a lake's presence and its contact with glaciers, as well as quantitative data containing the area and perimeter of lakes, were accordingly recorded in an attribute table, which maintained a common identifier for each lake in all periods analysed. All glacial lakes were further verified by analysis of oblique aerial photographs from the 1936–1938 NPI flying campaign.

During the third step, the vectorised data from the 1990s (Table 1) were applied to selected glacial lakes situated in the same location as the lakes from the reference period (2008–2012). In addition to considering lakes that existed in the 1990s within the area occupied by glacial lakes in the 2008–2012 reference interval, we used a buffer that took into account water bodies located within 50 m of the reference period bodies in the selection process using ArcMap 10.7.1 software. Then the selected glacial lakes were quality-checked using the aerial photo data from 2008 to 2012.

The fourth step was to quality-check the glacial lakes selected from the reference period database using Google Earth Pro. If the quality of the images was such that analysis was possible, the areas of the glacial lakes were measured.

The final step of the data compilation involved vectorising the glacial lakes based on Sentinel images obtained in August 2020. The data collected (areas and perimeters) were added to the integrated attribute table, which enabled the inventory to be supplemented with data from 2020.

3.3 Measurement errors

To estimate the total measurement errors of the glacial lake area in Svalbard, the conventional error propagation technique was applied to the manually vectorised data from the 1930s, 1990s, 2008–2012 and 2020. The assumed uncertainty of horizontal lake outline vectorisation was different for individual periods, depending on the image precision and the data source. For data from the 1930s, we assumed a vectorisation uncertainty of ±20 m. The data from the 1990s was based on topographic map 1: 100 000 and 2008–2012 was based on high-resolution aerial imagery, so for these periods we assumed a vectorisation uncertainty of ±1 m. As the manual vectorisation was sometimes based on lower-resolution images (a margin of error of >10 m), the Sentinel data from 2020 was assessed as having a vectorisation uncertainty of ±20 m.

On completion of the vectorisation procedure, two area buffers with the assumed positive and negative vectorisation uncertainties were created around the lake outlines to estimate their higher and lower bounds of area measurement error. The average of the absolute differences between measured and buffered lake areas were set as the area measurement error of individual lakes. These were further used to calculate the total lake area measurement error for Svalbard and for all the time intervals in this study by means of the standard formula:

(1)$$s = \sqrt {( {a^2} ) + ( {b^2} ) + ( {c^2} ) + \ldots + ( {z^2} ) } $$

where:

s – subregional/regional total lake area measurement error;

a, b, c, and z – measurement uncertainties for individual lakes within the region of interest.

We used Eqn 1 to obtain total lake area measurement errors for the entire area of Svalbard of the order of <1% for the periods 1990 and 2008/2012 and up to a few per cent for the remaining periods (Table 3). In addition, the average measurement uncertainty was differentiated with respect to the individual regions of Svalbard (Fig. 3).

Table 3. Long-term changes of glacial lakes in Svalbard with a full coverage record (1930s–2020) for analysed time periods

Figure 3. Uncertainty of lake area assessment for the period 1930s–2020.

Source: base map from Norwegian Polar Institute.

3.4 Inventory features

The information extracted from the data sources was compiled and grouped in the final inventory. We extended the metadata by including information about the regions in which the individual lakes are located (Dallmann, Reference Dallmann2015) and about the lithology based on geokart.npolar.no – Geology. The Digital Elevation Model (DEM) has a resolution of 20 m and is made up of DEMs created for separate smaller areas of Svalbard on various dates in 2011. The model was finally published in 2014 (Norwegian Polar Institute, 2020a, 2020b). Based on the DEM provided by NPI, the heights above sea level of the individual lakes and their dams were recorded by creating the centroids of the objects in ArcMap 10.7.1. Based on the Glacier Atlas of Svalbard and Jan Mayen and TopoSvalbard, information on each of the glaciers that came into direct contact with the lakes was recorded (Hagen and others, Reference Hagen, Liestøl, Roland and Jørgensen1993).

Using the spatial statistics tools available in ArcMap 10.7.1, we determined the directional distribution of individual glacial lake classes relative to the geology of Svalbard. According to definition of this tool it creates standard deviational ellipses to summarise the spatial characteristics of geographic features: central tendency, dispersion, and directional trends.

All the lakes were classified on the basis of their dam properties by applying the classifications of Emmer and others (Reference Emmer, Klimeš, Mergili, Vilímek and Cochachin2016) and Yao and others (Reference Yao, Liu, Han and Sun2018). The classification of Emmer and others (Reference Emmer, Klimeš, Mergili, Vilímek and Cochachin2016) is less detailed than that of Yao and others (Reference Yao, Liu, Han and Sun2018) as it only divides lakes into classes, while Yao and others (Reference Yao, Liu, Han and Sun2018)'s the latter includes a subclass division (Table 2). Applying a unified classification scheme makes it possible to group glacial lakes into those that potentially exhibit increased seasonal changes and those that will drain only during GLOF events. The biggest challenge with regard to the Emmer and others (Reference Emmer, Klimeš, Mergili, Vilímek and Cochachin2016) and Yao and others (Reference Yao, Liu, Han and Sun2018) classifications was to identify bedrock-dammed lakes using remote sensing tools. Emmer and others (Reference Emmer, Klimeš, Mergili, Vilímek and Cochachin2016) call these glacial lakes ‘bedrock-dammed lakes’, whereas the term ‘glacial erosion lakes’ is used by Yao and others (Reference Yao, Liu, Han and Sun2018).

To obtain additional data, we compared the altitudes of the glacial lakes above sea level between the first and last years of the periods analysed (1936–2020). We aggregated lakes into increments of 50 m altitude intervals before performing an exponential fitting in MS Excel software.

4. Results

4.1 Glacial lake typology and change inventory

The Svalbard glacial lake inventory contains 566 lakes that were present during the reference period (2008–2012) (Fig. 5). 560 of these lakes are included in Table 2; the other six are not categorised in light of the criteria selected for comparing lakes according to the classifications by Emmer and others (Reference Emmer, Klimeš, Mergili, Vilímek and Cochachin2016) and Yao and others (Reference Yao, Liu, Han and Sun2018) (Fig. 4). The six unclassified glacial lakes make up a tiny minority and are therefore not considered in the following analysis.

Figure 4. Classification of glacial lakes in different regions of Svalbard.

Figure 5. The distribution of glacial lake types in Svalbard based on the classification by Emmer and others (Reference Emmer, Klimeš, Mergili, Vilímek and Cochachin2016). Source: base map from Norwegian Polar Institute.

On the basis of these lake classifications, moraine-dammed lakes represent more than half of all glacial lakes in Svalbard (290) (Figs 5 and 6a), followed by ice-dammed lakes (157) (Fig. 6b), whereas bedrock-dammed lakes constitute less than 20% of them (113) (Fig. 6c). The region with the greatest number of glacial lakes is Ny-Friesland (north-east Spitsbergen), while that with the fewest is Bünsow Land in central Spitsbergen (Fig. 4). Moraine-thaw lakes (sensu Yao and others, Reference Yao, Liu, Han and Sun2018), also known as moraine thermokarst lakes (Coulombe and others, Reference Coulombe2022) (Fig. 6a) are the most common type of moraine-dammed lakes formed in the marginal zones of Svalbard glaciers (152). The 99 frontal moraine-dammed lakes (Fig. 6a) and the 39 lateral moraine-dammed lakes are the other subgroups of moraine-dammed lakes (Fig. 6a; Table 2). The 157 ice-dammed lakes lie mainly in north-east Spitsbergen and between two ice caps on the island of Nordaustlandet (Fig. 6b). The ice-dammed lakes (157) can be categorised into 38 advancing-glacier ice-dammed lakes (Fig. 6b) and 119 other ice-dammed lakes. (Fig. 6b; Table 2). The 113 bedrock-dammed lakes are situated primarily on Nordaustlandet and in the northern part of Ny-Friesland (Fig. 6c). As it is often difficult to identify bedrock-dammed lakes from remote sensing data, the classification of some of these lakes should be validated by field observations. Using the classification of Yao and others (Reference Yao, Liu, Han and Sun2018), we distinguished ten cirque lakes (Fig. 6c), three glacial valley lakes (Fig. 6c) and 100 other glacial erosion lakes (Fig. 6c; Table 2).

Figure 6. Spatial distribution of (a) moraine-dammed lakes in Svalbard: (a.1) frontal moraine-dammed lake at Holmströmbreen, Morabreen and Orsabreen, (a.2) lateral moraine-dammed lake at Storskavlen, (a.3) moraine-thaw lake at Eidembreen; (b) ice-dammed lakes in Svalbard: (b.1) advancing-glacier ice-dammed lake at Etonbreen, (b.2) other ice-dammed lake at Backabreen, (b.3) other ice-dammed lake at Flòtbreen; (c) bedrock-dammed lakes in Svalbard: (c.1) cirque lake, (c.2) glacial valley lake at Longstaffbreen, (c.3) another glacial erosion lake at Buldrebreen.

Source: base map from Norwegian Polar Institute and Sentinel satellite images.

Our classification shows a specific spatial pattern in the distribution of different classes of glacial lakes across Svalbard. The largest number of bedrock-dammed lakes occurs in Nordaustlandet (58%), whereas 38% are in north Spitsbergen and 4% in south Spitsbergen. This contrast with the distribution of ice-dammed lakes, where 54% are in north Spitsbergen and 26 and 13% are in Nordaustlandet and south Spitsbergen, respectively. Most moraine-dammed lakes are in north Spitsbergen (58%) and south Spitsbergen (28%), whereas Edgeøya and Prins Karls Forland each have 4% of the moraine-dammed lakes.

We have shown that between the 1930s and 2020 there is a 1.7-fold (or 72 km2) increase in the total area of the lakes with full coverage record in Svalbard (Table 3). By full coverage record, we mean glacial lakes that were observable in all records examined. The largest changes in the number of glacial lakes took place in north Spitsbergen (Fig. 7), where 43 lakes existed in the 1930s, 120 in the 1990s, and 112 between 2008 and 2012. For lack of data of the appropriate quality for the entire island of Nordaustlandet, only 61 of the 294 glacial lakes there were identified from 2013 to 2019. However, the Sentinel data showed that there were 169 lakes on the island in 2020.

Figure 7. Surface areas of glacial lakes in Svalbard in (a) the 1930s, (b) the 1990s, (c) 2008–2012, (d) 2013–2019, and (e) 2020.

Source: base map from Norwegian Polar Institute.

To better represent the changes of glacial lakes that have occurred in Svalbard, we have selected only those lakes for which we have full coverage records (1936–2020) for direct analysis. This data subset, listed in Table 3, indicates that a pronounced increase in glacial lake area occurred between the 1990s and 2008–2012. It is important to note that the analysis of the full years of data (1936–2020) differs from that of other years with incomplete data. Because our aim is to demonstrate the trends in Svalbard, we will focus on the analysis of the full coverage records.

Changes in the area of glacial lakes over the time intervals revealed an additional trend, showing that the extent of lake drainage was the largest between 2013–2019 and 2020 (about 12 km2, 2.7% per dec) and the smallest between the 1930s and 1990s (about 5 km2, 0.2% per dec). In contrast, the largest increase in the total area of glacial lakes occurred between the 1990s and 2008–2012 (about 46 km2, 5% per dec) and the smallest between 2013–2019 and 2020 (about 16 km2, 3.5% per dec). As regards the overall development of glacial lakes on Svalbard, there was a continuous increase in the area of these lakes between 1936 and 2020 (about +72 km2, +177%). The analysis shows that the greatest changes in the area of glacial lakes (1936–2020) took place on Edgeøya and in James I Land, where the glacial lake area increased by over 10 km2 (Table 3). In contrast, the largest decreases in glacial lake area were recorded in Prins Oscars Land and Orvin Land, where the loss was more than 0.5 km2. For better comparison of our results, we also normalised the changes that occurred between 1936 and 2020 in the surface area of glacial lakes per 100 km2 of each region (Table 3). The largest changes in lake surface areas in the different Svalbard regions occurred in James I Land (+0.76 km2) and the smallest in Sørkapp Land (0.01 km2). The largest decrease in lake area was recorded in Prins Oscars Land (−0.18 km2). Figure 8 shows examples of three moraine-dammed lakes located on Svalbard, where a significant increase in area has been observed in recent years.

Figure 8. Examples of rapid changes in glacial lakes in Svalbard: (a) Lake Gandvatnet, (b) Lake Trebrevatnet, and (c) Lake Vetterndammen.

Source: based on Sentinel and Landsat satellite images.

Owing to the diverse bedrock geology of Svalbard, we prepared basic spatial statistics showing certain dependencies between the lithology and the type of glacial lake (Table 4, Fig. 9). Moraine-dammed lakes, which are found primarily on the west coast of Spitsbergen, lie mainly on unconsolidated and sedimentary rock substrates. Ice-dammed lakes predominate on the metamorphic rocks in north-eastern Spitsbergen and central Nordaustlandet. On igneous rocks, we have bedrock-dammed lakes in Nordaustlandet, but they are few of them in comparison with the other types of lakes. In addition, we took into account the distribution of the individual glacial lake types in relation to the entire archipelago and indicated their spatial distribution axis using the spatial statistics tool ‘directional distribution’, shown in Figure 9.

Figure 9. Statistical approach of median centres of glacial lake types and their relationship with the directional distribution of lake basins.

Source: base map from Norwegian Polar Institute.

Table 4. Types of glacial lakes and their bedrock geology

During all the time periods, 75% of the glacial lakes lay at elevations between 0 and 50 m a.s.l. (Fig. 10a–e). Only the 1930s stand out in this case, when the number of lakes in Svalbard was almost similar across the different altitude ranges from 0 to 250 m a.s.l. From the 1930s to 2020, the number of glacial lakes above 250 m a.s.l. decreased significantly, whereas from 251 to 400 m a.s.l. this number remained much the same. Above 401 m a.s.l., there was a small increase. Above 650 m a.s.l., the number of glacial lakes fell to a few occurring even at heights above 1042 m a.s.l.

Figure 10. (a–e) Distribution of glacial lakes with 50 m a.s.l. altitude increments. (f) Distribution of the altitude of glacial lakes showing signs of drainage events.

4.2 GLOF inventory

Comparison of the available data from the areas of glacial lake changes between 1936 and 2020 shows the historical occurrences of glacial lake drainage events based only on remote sensing data. In total, there were 25 such events identified between 1936 and the 1990s, 39 between the 1990s and 2008–2012, 30 between 2008–2012 and 2013–2019, and 40 between 2013–2019 and 2020 (Figs 10f and 11). For a more accurate interpretation of the results, we normalised the lake drainage events per decade, as follows: there were 4 between 1936 and the 1990s, 26 between the 1990s and 2008–2012, 50 between 2008–2012 and 2013–2019, and 100 between 2013–2019 and 2020.

Figure 11. Spatial distribution of glacial lakes drainage events in Svalbard during the period 1936–2020.

Base map from Norwegian Polar Institute (2020b).

We have to take into consideration the possibility that while we probably determined glacial lake drainage events that occurred between the 1990s and 2020, lake drainage between the 1930s and 1990s could also have occurred slowly and lasted for several years. However, for lack of an adequate range of data from the first half of the 20th century, this is the only possible method of estimating the minimum number of lake drainage events in the first half of the 20th century and thereafter until the 1990s. Over the entire period from the 1930s to 2020, there were at least 16 drainage events from bedrock-dammed lakes, 53 from ice-dammed lakes and 65 from moraine-dammed lakes.

We have also indicated at what altitude above sea level the lake drainage events included in our inventory originated. The highest number of recorded drainage events occurred from lakes at altitudes between 0 and 150 m a.s.l. Lakes situated up to 300 m a.s.l. were less active in this respect, and above this altitude only a few such events (less than 10) are known to have taken place. The highest-lying lake showing increased drainage activity was situated at 701–750 m a.s.l. (Fig. 10f).

5. Discussion

This first inventory of glacial lakes in Svalbard characterises the mechanisms controlling lake formation, growth and changes over time. Our dataset spans a period of more than 80 years, during which time Svalbard glaciers have retreated significantly from their maximum positions in the LIA, which came to an end at the turn of the 20th century. Until the mid-1980s, the glaciers on Svalbard were relatively stable in terms of annual mass loss or gain (Noël and others, Reference Noël2020). Since 1985, however, their mass has been in continuous decline, resulting in the cumulative loss of about 350 Gt of ice cover from Svalbard by 2012 (Noël and others, Reference Noël2020). The rate of glacial mass loss in Svalbard between 2000 and 2019 has been estimated at −7 Gt yr−1 (Noël and others, Reference Noël2020). It is therefore lower than the corresponding rate in Alaska (−75 Gt yr−1), which is the highest worldwide (Jakob and others, Reference Jakob, Gourmelen, Ewart and Plummer2021; Zemp and others, Reference Zemp2012; Rick and others, Reference Rick, Mcgrath, Armstrong and Mccoy2022), but significantly higher than that in the Himalaya (−2.86 Gt yr−1) (Kaushik and others, Reference Kaushik, Singh and Joshi2022). Thus, if we normalise the rate of deglaciation of the regions listed with respect to the area occupied by glaciers there per 100 km2, the highest value is invariably found in Alaska (−0.25 Gt yr−1/100 km2), followed by Svalbard (−0.02 Gt yr−1/100 km2) and the Himalaya (−0.01 Gt yr−1/100 km2) (Noël and others, Reference Noël2020; Jakob and others, Reference Jakob, Gourmelen, Ewart and Plummer2021; Kaushik and others, Reference Kaushik, Singh and Joshi2022; Rick and others, Reference Rick, Mcgrath, Armstrong and Mccoy2022). Glacial ablation allows glacial lakes to form in proglacial zones free of ice (Furian and others, Reference Furian, Loibl and Schneider2021). The ratio of the area of glacial lakes (km2) to the normalised glaciated area of Svalbard (per 100 km2) was 0.2 in 1936 but as much as 0.43 in 2010, and despite their rather rapid development (disappearance of glaciers, with a simultaneous increase in lake area), is relatively small compared to Alaska, where the average lake area (km2) per 100 km2 of glaciers was between 0.2 and 1.7 (Rick and others, Reference Rick, Mcgrath, Armstrong and Mccoy2022).

Our study highlights two key patterns: (1) There is a clear spatial distribution of different types of glacial lake in Svalbard controlled by geology, and (2) since the 1930s, glacial lakes in Svalbard have experienced phases of fastest growth between 1990s and 2008–2012, which harmonise with temporal patterns in other regions (Shugar and others, Reference Shugar2020; Wang and others, Reference Wang2020). These patterns are discussed below.

5.1 Spatial distribution of glacial lakes

The proportion of each glacial lake class on Svalbard contrasts with the inventory of glacial lakes in Alaska, which shows that Alaska has a different pattern, where the most frequent glacial lakes are moraine-dammed lakes, followed by bedrock-dammed lakes and lastly ice-dammed lakes (Rick and others, Reference Rick, Mcgrath, Armstrong and Mccoy2022). In high-mountain regions such as the Himalaya, the Andes, the Karakoram and the Alps, where glacial lake inventories have been compiled, such lakes are primarily restricted to U-shaped valleys (Zhang and others, Reference Zhang, Yao, Xie, Wang and Yang2015; Viani and others, Reference Viani, Giardino, Huggel, Perotti and Mortara2016; Buckel and others, Reference Buckel, Otto, Prasicek and Keuschnig2018; Wilson and others, Reference Wilson2018). This is also in contrast to Svalbard, where glacial lakes are located mainly within moraines which in the archipelago are often located beyond the U-shaped valleys.

Based on the data presented, we attribute the spatial variability in glacial lake types in Svalbard to its diverse geology, geomorphology and climate. Most of the moraine-dammed lakes lie along the west coast of Spitsbergen, the maritime climate of which is strongly influenced by its proximity to the warm West Spitsbergen Current. This area is dominated by sedimentary rocks (Fig. 8), mountainous topography and experiences frequent paraglacial and periglacial processes, all of which contribute to large amounts of debris falling onto glacier surfaces and, hence, to sediment availability to build end and lateral moraines (de Haas and others, Reference de Haas, Kleinhans, Carbonneau, Rubensdotter and Hauber2015; Eckerstorfer and others, Reference Eckerstorfer, Malnes and Christiansen2017; Rouyet and others, Reference Rouyet2021). Water to fill the lakes is abundant along the west coast owing to the highest melt rates of local land-terminating glaciers (Małecki, Reference Małecki2022) and the relatively high level of liquid precipitation (Førland and Hanssen-Bauer, Reference Førland and Hanssen-Bauer2000). Glacial lakes on coasts are similarly dominant in Alaska and east Greenland (How and others, Reference How2021; Rick and others, Reference Rick, Mcgrath, Armstrong and Mccoy2022). In contrast, bedrock-dammed and ice-dammed lakes are found mainly to the north-east of Svalbard. In this region, moraines are not so well-developed owing to the limited availability of sediments, which is associated with the glacier type (mainly ice caps) and bedrock lithology (more resistant igneous and metamorphic rocks).

Glacial lakes in Svalbard display similarities to glacial lakes situated in high mountain and polar areas. For instance, the lakes in north-eastern Spitsbergen, where ice-dammed lakes dominate, may well resemble the ‘high mountain’ glacial lakes in the Andes (Emmer and others, Reference Emmer2020), whereas the moraine-dammed lakes dominating west Spitsbergen have morphological characteristics similar to those of glacial lakes in deep Himalayan valleys (Khadka and others, Reference Khadka, Zhang and Thakuri2018).

5.2 Temporal changes in glacial lakes

An important finding of this study is the considerable increase of the glacial lake area in Svalbard over the period of study. Among the glacial lakes with complete temporal data coverage (Table 4), this increase was equal to 177% (or 72 km2) between 1936 and 2020. More recently, the 83% increase (51 km2) from the 1990s to 2020 sets Svalbard above the global average rate of glacial lake expansion (a 51% increase in area during 1990–2015; Shugar and others, Reference Shugar2020), but not as high as some other high-latitude regions such as Iceland (+142%), Scandinavia (+131%) and Arctic Russia (+152%) (Shugar and others, Reference Shugar2020).

As regards the glacial lakes in Svalbard, the data presented in Table 5 show a post-2012 decline in their overall number. Although the time windows with the best quality data and highest lake count coincide (2008–2012), we argue that the recent decrease in the number of glacial lakes is a true phenomenon. This may be explained by the merging of existing glacial lakes into larger networks and the partial drainage of higher-elevated lakes to supply lower ones. This is in line with the observed increase in the overall area (Table 4), average area (e.g. from 0.13 km2 in 1936 to 0.30 km2 in 2020) and median area (e.g. from 0.002 km2 in 1936 and 0.013 km2 in 2020). This evolution of Svalbard lakes stands in contrast to the dominant global pattern, as in other regions there appears to be a continuous increase of both lake areas and numbers, such as Greenland between the 1980s and 2017 (How and others, Reference How2021), Alaska between the 1980s and 2010s (Rick and others, Reference Rick, Mcgrath, Armstrong and Mccoy2022) or Nepal between 1987 and 2017 (Khadka and others, Reference Khadka, Zhang and Thakuri2018). Whether or not a similar reduction in the number of glacial lakes is taking place elsewhere is, however, unclear owing to the different timestamps between existing studies. Nevertheless, this finding highlights the benefit of increased time resolution used in glacial lake research and demonstrates that it enables quantification of shorter term, nonobvious trends in glacial lake evolution.

Table 5. Changes of glacial lakes in Svalbard from the 1930s to 2020

5.3 Lake drainage events in Svalbard

In the present study, we detected 134 lake drainage events from glacial lakes in Svalbard between the 1930s and 2020. Most events (65) were associated with drainage from moraine-dammed lakes. This is hardly surprising, given that moraine-dammed lakes are the most frequent glacial lake type in Svalbard and exhibit the greatest changes in number and area over the study period. During the summer season, when the water runoff exceeds the retention capacity, water might overtop moraine dams or create moraine breaches, causing lake drainage with a potential for GLOF events (Clague and Evans, Reference Clague and Evans2000; Thompson and others, Reference Thompson, Benn, Dennis and Luckman2012; Harrison and others, Reference Harrison2018; Veh and others, Reference Veh, Korup, von Specht, Roessner and Walz2019; Ewertowski and Tomczyk, Reference Ewertowski and Tomczyk2020; Tomczyk and others, Reference Tomczyk, Ewertowski and Carrivick2020; Worni and others, Reference Worni, Huggel, Clague, Schaub and Stoffel2014; Cook and others, Reference Cook, Kougkoulos, Edwards, Dortch and Hoffmann2016; Emmer, Reference Emmer2017). Overall, the ratio of detected lake drainage events to the 2008–2012 number of moraine-dammed lakes was 1:4.5. An example of a GLOF event of this class of lake occurred at Lake Trebrevatnet (Fig. 9).

Our observations indicate that ice-dammed lakes might experience even greater seasonal changes than moraine-dammed lakes, which would constitute the greatest GLOF threat in Svalbard. This is mostly due to the susceptibility of ice dams to seasonal changes and their repeated collapse (Prakash and Nagarajan, Reference Prakash and Nagarajan2018; Bhambri and others, Reference Bhambri2020; Lützow and others, Reference Lützow, Veh and Korup2023; Veh and others, Reference Veh2023). Among all the ice-dammed lakes in Svalbard, we counted 53 lake drainage events, which resulted in a high lake drainage event-to-lake number ratio of 1:3.0, which corresponds to the anticipated instability of ice-dammed lakes. A good example is Lake Goësvatnet, the best documented ice-dammed lake in Svalbard (NW Sørkapp Land). Until the year 2000, the lake drained through a channel located in the transition zone between dead ice and the active glacier ice of Gåsbreen, followed by its complete disappearance as a result of a GLOF event (Grzes and Banach, Reference Grześ and Banach1984; Schoner and Schoner, Reference Schoner and Schoner1997; Ziaja and Ostafin, Reference Ziaja and Ostafin2007; Ziaja and others, Reference Ziaja, Dudek and Ostafin2016). In accounting for the further projected temperature increase over Svalbard (Hanssen-Bauer and others, Reference Hanssen-Bauer2019) and the anticipated acceleration in glacier retreat, we expect similar GLOF events to occur in Svalbard in the coming years and decades, owing to the increasing amounts of water accumulated behind retreating ice dams, particularly in Nordaustlandet and north-eastern Spitsbergen, where ice-dammed lakes are the most numerous (Fig. 8).

Of the other types of glacial lakes on Svalbard, bedrock-dammed lakes are the fewest in number, mostly located in Nordaustlandet and north-eastern Spitsbergen (Fig. 8). The number of detected lake drainage events from bedrock-dammed lakes was the lowest (16), resulting in the lowest lake drainage event-to-lake number ratio of 1:7.0. GLOF events from bedrock-dammed lakes may only occur in response to catastrophic trigger events, such as large calving events, avalanches, mountain slope mass movements or cascading effects due to glacial floods from higher lakes, which are capable of triggering displacement waves overtopping bedrock dams (Carey and others, Reference Carey, Huggel, Bury, Portocarrero and Haeberli2012; Vilímek and others, Reference Vilímek, Klimeš, Emmer and Benešová2015; Emmer and others, Reference Emmer, Klimeš, Mergili, Vilímek and Cochachin2016; Vilca and others, Reference Vilca, Mergili, Emmer, Holger and Huggel2021). Owing to the generally low ice velocities of most land-terminating glaciers in Svalbard (Małecki, Reference Małecki2022) and the relatively gentle topography in north-eastern Svalbard, we anticipate a low likelihood of GLOFs from bedrock-dammed lakes in the near future.

6. Conclusions

This inventory constitutes a record of 566 glacial lakes in Svalbard (2008–2012) with a total area of 146.14 km2. The vast majority of the 290 moraine-dammed lakes lie on the west coast of Spitsbergen, whereas the 157 ice-dammed lakes dominate north-eastern Spitsbergen and the 113 bedrock-dammed lakes prevail on Nordaustlandet. The spatial distribution of glacial lakes in Svalbard is interpreted as having resulted from the interplay between local climatic conditions, glacier margin retreat, adjacent landscape features and bedrock lithology. The temporal changes in Svalbard's glacial lakes indicate that they increased in number from the 1930s to 2008–2012, thereafter decreasing to 2020. The total area of glacial lakes increased continuously from the 1930s to 2020. The changes in the area and number of glacial lakes between the 1930s and 2020 also impacted the potential for glacial lake drainage events or GLOFs. A total of 134 glacial lakes that experienced at least partial drainage were identified, and it is anticipated that the frequency of glacial lake drainage events or GLOFs will increase in the future as a result of climate warming and the associated destabilisation of moraines and ice dams. We also argue that our results should initiate a debate on GLOF hazards in Svalbard based on historical occurrence of this events. The observed changes reflect how climate changes affect glacial landscape evolution in Svalbard by accelerating the formation of glacial lakes, leading to higher risks associated with glacial lake drainage events.

Supplementary material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/jog.2023.34

Acknowledgements

This study is a contribution to the National Science Centre project ‘GLAVE’ (Award No. UMO-2020/38/E/ST10/00042). IW field observations of glacial lakes in Svalbard were supported by Arctic Field Grant No. 333199. The authors would like to thank the NPI for granting access to the aerial imagery data. ŁS was supported from the Bekker Programme (award no. BPN/BEK/2021/1/00431) at the Polish National Agency for Scientific Exchange as a part of his fellowship at the GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences in Potsdam The authors gratefully acknowledge critical remarks and comments by four reviewers and editors Dan Shugar and Hester Jiskoot which significantly helped us improve the manuscript. We also thank Peter Senn for polishing the English.

Author contributions

The research presented in this paper was conceived by IW, MCS, LS and JCY. The investigation of the problem and the methodology were developed by IW, who also carried out the GIS analyses. IW prepared the draft version of the manuscript and the data visualisation, while JCY, JM, MCS and LS commented and edited the manuscript. MCS was the project PI responsible for funding acquisition and the supervision of IW.

Data availability

Sentinel-2 imagery is available from the Sentinel Hub (available apps.sentinel-hub.com, last access: 15 May 2022). The topographic data of Svalbard are available from the NPI (https://toposvalbard.npolar.no/, last access: 15 May 2022 and https://geodata.npolar.no/, last access: 15 May 2022).

Conflict of interest

The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest. Reference Rajaram, Ganeshkumar and Partheeban2023

References

Aggarwal, S, Rai, SC, Thakur, PK and Emmer, A (2017) Inventory and recently increasing GLOF susceptibility of glacial lakes in Sikkim, Eastern Himalaya. Geomorphology 295, 3954. doi: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2017.06.014CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andreassen, LM, Nagy, T, Kjøllmoen, B and Leigh, JR (2022) An inventory of Norway's glaciers and ice-marginal lakes from 2018–19 Sentinel-2 data. Journal of Glaciology 68(272), 122. doi: 10.1017/jog.2022.20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bhambri, R and 9 others (2020) The hazardous 2017–2019 surge and river damming by Shispare Glacier, Karakoram. Scientific Reports 10(4685), 114. doi: 10.1038/s41598–020-61277-8.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Buckel, J, Otto, JC, Prasicek, G and Keuschnig, M (2018) Glacial lakes in Austria – distribution and formation since the Little Ice Age. Global and Planetary Change 164, 3951. doi: 10.1016/j.gloplacha.2018.03.003CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carey, M, Huggel, C, Bury, J, Portocarrero, C and Haeberli, W (2012) An integrated socio-environmental framework for glacier hazard management and climate change adaptation: lessons from lake 513, Cordillera Blanca, Peru. Climatic Change 112, 733767. doi: 10.1007/s10584-011-0249-8CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carrivick, JL and Tweed, FS (2013) Proglacial lakes: character, behaviour and geological importance. Quaternary Science Reviews 78, 3452. doi: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2013.07.028CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carrivick, JL, Tweed, FS, Sutherland, JL and Mallalieu, J (2020) Toward numerical modeling of interactions between ice-marginal proglacial lakes and glaciers. Frontiers in Earth Science 8(577068), 19. doi: 10.3389/feart.2020.577068CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chen, F, Zhang, M, Tian, B and Li, Z (2017) Extraction of glacial lake outlines in Tibet Plateau using Landsat 8 imagery and Google Earth Engine. IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing 10(9), 40024009. doi: 10.1109/JSTARS.2017.2705718CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clague, JJ and Evans, SG (2000) A review of catastrophic drainage of moraine-dammed lakes in British Columbia. Quaternary Science Reviews 19, 17631783.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cook, SJ, Kougkoulos, I, Edwards, LA, Dortch, J and Hoffmann, D (2016) Glacier change and glacial lake outburst flood risk in the Bolivian Andes. The Cryosphere 10(5), 23992413. doi: 10.5194/tc-10-2399-2016CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coulombe, S and 7 others (2022) Contrasted geomorphological and limnological properties of thermokarst lakes formed in buried glacier ice and ice-wedge polygon terrain. The Cryosphere 16(7), 28372857. doi: 10.5194/tc-16-2837-2022CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dallmann, WK (2015) Geoscience atlas of Svalbard. Norwegian Polar Institute Report 148, 1292.Google Scholar
de Haas, T, Kleinhans, MG, Carbonneau, PE, Rubensdotter, L and Hauber, E (2015) Surface morphology of fans in the high-Arctic periglacial environment of Svalbard: controls and processes. Earth-Science Reviews 146, 163182. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.earscirev.2015.04.004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dudek, J, Wieczorek, I, Suwiński, MK and Strzelecki, MC (2022) Multidecadal analysis of paraglacial landscape changes in the foreland of Gåsbreen – Sørkapp Land, Svalbard. Land Degradation and Development, 131. doi: 10.22541/au.165900615.50507100/v1.Google Scholar
Eckerstorfer, E, Malnes, E and Christiansen, HH (2017) Freeze/thaw conditions at periglacial landforms in Kapp Linné, Svalbard, investigated using field observations, in situ, and radar satellite monitoring. Geomorphology 293, 433447. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.geomorph.2017.02.010.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Emmer, A (2017) Geomorphologically effective floods from moraine-dammed lakes in the Cordillera Blanca, Peru. Quaternary Science Reviews 177, 220234. doi: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2017.10.028CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Emmer, A and 5 others (2020) 70 years of lake evolution and glacial lake outburst floods in the Cordillera Blanca (Peru) and implications for the future. Geomorphology 365, 107178. doi: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2020.107178CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Emmer, A and 36 others (2022) Progress and challenges in glacial lake outburst flood research (2017–2021): a research community perspective. Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences 22, 30413061. doi: 10.5194/nhess-22-3041-2022CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Emmer, A, Klimeš, J, Mergili, M, Vilímek, V and Cochachin, A (2016) 882 lakes of the Cordillera Blanca: an inventory, classification, evolution and assessment of susceptibility to outburst floods. Catena 147, 269279. doi: 10.1016/j.catena.2016.07.032CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evans, IS (2011) Glacier distribution and direction in Svalbard, Axel Heiberg Island and throughout the Arctic: general northward tendencies. Polish Polar Research 32(3), 199238. doi: 10.2478/v10183-011-0015-7CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ewertowski, MW and Tomczyk, AM (2020) Reactivation of temporarily stabilized ice-cored moraines in front of polythermal glaciers: Gravitational mass movements as the most important geomorphological agents for the redistribution of sediments (a case study from Ebbabreen and Ragnarbreen, Svalbard). Geomorphology 350, 106952. doi: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2019.106952CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Farnsworth, WR, Ingólfsson, Ó, Retelle, M and Schomacker, A (2016) Over 400 previously undocumented Svalbard surge-type glaciers identified. Geomorphology 264, 5260. doi: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2016.03.025CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fitzsimons, S and Howarth, J (2018) Glaciolacustrine processes. In Menzies J & van der Meer JJM (eds) Past Glacial Environments. Amsterdam: Elsevier, pp. 309334. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-08-100524-8.00009-9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Førland, EJ, Benestad, R, Hanssen-Bauer, I, Haugen, JE and Skaugen, TE (2011) Temperature and Precipitation Development at Svalbard 1900–2100. Advances in Meteorology 2011, 114. doi: 10.1155/2011/893790CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Førland, EJ and Hanssen-Bauer, I (2000) Increased precipitation in the Norwegian Arctic: True or false? Climatic Change 46(4), 485509. doi: 10.1023/A:1005613304674CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Furian, W, Loibl, D and Schneider, C (2021) Future glacial lakes in High Mountain Asia: an inventory and assessment of hazard potential from surrounding slopes. Journal of Glaciology 67(264), 653670. doi: 10.1017/jog.2021.18CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geyman, EC, van Pelt, WJJ, Maloof, AC, Aas, HF and Kohler, J (2022) Historical glacier change on Svalbard predicts doubling of mass loss by 2100. Nature 601(7893), 374379. doi: 10.1038/s41586-021-04314-4CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Govindha Raj, BK and Kumar, VK (2016) Inventory of glacial lakes and its evolution in Uttarakhand Himalaya using time series satellite data. Journal of the Indian Society of Remote Sensing 44(6), 959976. doi: 10.1007/s12524-016-0560-yGoogle Scholar
Govindha Raj BK, , Kumar, VK and Remya, SN (2013) Remote sensing-based inventory of glacial lakes in Sikkim Himalaya: semi-automated approach using satellite data. Geomatics, Natural Hazards and Risk 4(3), 241253. doi: 10.1080/19475705.2012.707153CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grześ, M and Banach, M (1984) The origin and evolution of the Goes Lake in Sorkapp Land, Spitsbergen. Polish Polar Research 5(3–4), 241253.Google Scholar
Hagen, JO, Liestøl, O, Roland, E and Jørgensen, T (1993) Glacier atlas of Svalbard and Jan Mayen. Norwegian Polar Institute meddelelser 129, 169 pp.Google Scholar
Hanssen-Bauer, I and 5 others (2019) Climate in Svalbard 2100 - a knowledge base for climate adaptation. Norwegian Centre for Climate Services report 1/2019, 105 pp.Google Scholar
Harrison, S and 14 others (2018) Climate change and the global pattern of moraine-dammed glacial lake outburst floods. The Cryosphere 12(4), 11951209. doi: 10.5194/tc-12-1195-2018CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holm, TM and 6 others (2012) Rapid physicochemical changes in the high Arctic Lake Kongressvatn caused by recent climate change. Aquatic Sciences 74(3), 385395. doi: 10.1007/s00027-011-0229-0CrossRefGoogle Scholar
How, P and 10 others (2021) Greenland-wide inventory of ice marginal lakes using a multi-method approach. Scientific Reports 11(1), 113. doi: 10.1038/s41598-021-83509-1CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Humlum, O, Instanes, A and Sollid, JL (2003) Permafrost in Svalbard: a review of research history, climatic background and engineering challenges. Polar Research 22(2), 191215. doi: 10.1111/j.1751-8369.2003.tb00107.xCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huss, M, Bauder, A, Werder, M, Funk, M and Hock, R (2009) Glacier-dammed lake outburst events of Gornersee, Switzerland. Mitteilungen der Versuchsanstalt für Wasserbau, Hydrologie und Glaziologie an der Eidgenossischen Technischen Hochschule Zürich 53(213), 6584.Google Scholar
Isaksen, K and 5 others (2016) Recent warming on Spitsbergen – influence of atmospheric circulation and sea ice cover. Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres 121, 34463464. doi: 10.1002/2016JD025606.Google Scholar
Isaksen, K and 15 others (2022) Exceptional warming over the Barents area. Scientific Reports 12, 9371. doi: 10.1038/s41598-022-13568-5CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jain, SK, Lohani, AK, Singh, RD, Chaudhary, A and Thakural, LN (2012) Glacial lakes and glacial lake outburst flood in a Himalayan basin using remote sensing and GIS. Natural Hazards 62(3), 887899. doi: 10.1007/s11069-012-0120-xCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jakob, L, Gourmelen, N, Ewart, M and Plummer, S (2021) Spatially and temporally resolved ice loss in High Mountain Asia and the Gulf of Alaska observed by CryoSat-2 swath altimetry between 2010 and 2019. The Cryosphere 15, 18451862. doi: 10.5194/tc-15-1845-2021CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaushik, S, Singh, T and Joshi, PK (2022) Long-term spatiotemporal variability in the surface velocity of Eastern Himalayan glaciers, India. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms 47(7), 17201733. doi: 10.1002/esp.5342CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kavan, J and 5 others (2022) Estimating suspended sediment fluxes from the largest glacial lake in Svalbard to fjord system using Sentinel-2 data: Trebrevatnet case study. Water 14(2), 1840. doi: 10.3390/w14121840CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Khadka, N, Zhang, G and Thakuri, S (2018) Glacial lakes in the Nepal Himalaya: inventory and decadal dynamics (1977–2017). Remote Sensing 10(12), 1913. doi: 10.3390/rs10121913CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Loriaux, T and Casassa, G (2013) Evolution of glacial lakes from the Northern Patagonia Icefield and terrestrial water storage in a sea-level rise context. Global and Planetary Change 102, 3340. doi: 10.1016/j.gloplacha.2012.12.012CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Luo, W, Zhang, G, Chen, W and Xu, F (2020) Response of glacial lakes to glacier and climate changes in the western Nyainqentanglha range. Science of the Total Environment 735, 139607. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.139607CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lützow, N, Veh, G and Korup, O (2023) A global database of historic glacier lake outburst floods[preprint] Earth System Science Data, 127. doi: 10.5194/essd-2022-449.Google Scholar
Mal, S, Kumar, A, Bhambri, R, Schickhoff, U and Singh, RB (2020) Inventory and spatial distribution of glacial lakes in Arunachal Pradesh, Eastern Himalaya, India. Journal of the Geological Society of India 96(6), 609615. doi: 10.1007/s12594-020-1610-1CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Małecki, J (2016) Accelerating retreat and high-elevation thinning of glaciers in central Spitsbergen. The Cryosphere 10(3), 13171329. doi: 10.5194/tc-10-1317-2016CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Małecki, J (2022) Recent contrasting behaviour of mountain glaciers across the European High Arctic revealed by ArcticDEM data. The Cryosphere 16, 20672082. doi: 10.5194/tc-16-2067-2022CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mallalieu, J, Carrivick, JL, Quincey, DJ and Raby, CL (2021) Ice-marginal lakes associated with enhanced recession of the Greenland ice sheet. Global and Planetary Change 202, 103503. doi: 10.1016/j.gloplacha.2021.103503CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moreno-Ibáñez, M, Hagen, JO, Hübner, C, Lihavainen, H and Zaborska, A (2020) Sess Report 2020. Svalbard Integrated Arctic Earth Observing Service. 40 pp.Google Scholar
Nie, Y and 6 others (2017) A regional-scale assessment of Himalayan glacial lake changes using satellite observations from 1990 to 2015. Remote Sensing of Environment 189, 113. doi: 10.1016/j.rse.2016.11.008CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Noël, B and 10 others (2020) Low elevation of Svalbard glaciers drives high mass loss variability. Nature Communications 11, 4597. doi: 10.1038/s41467-020-18356-1CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nordli, Ø, Przybylak, R, Ogilvie, AEJ and Isaksen, K (2014) Long-term temperature trends and variability on Spitsbergen: the extended Svalbard Airport temperature series, 1898–2012. Polar Research 33, 21349. doi: 10.3402/polar.v33.21349CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Norwegian Polar Institute (2020a) TopoSvalbard. Available at https://toposvalbard.npolar.no/ (last access: 15 May 2022).Google Scholar
Norwegian Polar Institute (2020b) Norwegian Polar Institute Map Data and Services. Available at https://geodata.npolar.no/ (last access: 15 May 2022).Google Scholar
Nuth, C and 7 others (2013) Decadal changes from a multi-temporal glacier inventory of Svalbard. The Cryosphere 7(5), 16031621. doi: 10.5194/tc-7-1603-2013CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pfeffer, WT and 18 others (2014) The Randolph Glacier Inventory: a globally complete inventory of glaciers. Journal of Glaciology 60(221), 537552. doi: 10.3189/2014JoG13J176CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Post, A and Mayo, LR (1970) Glacier dammed lakes and outburst floods in Alaska. Hydrologic Investigations Atlas 455, 110.Google Scholar
Prakash, C and Nagarajan, R (2017) Outburst susceptibility assessment of moraine-dammed lakes in Western Himalaya using an analytic hierarchy process. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms 42(14), 23062321. doi: 10.1002/esp.4185CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prakash, C and Nagarajan, R (2018) Glacial lake changes and outburst flood hazard in Chandra basin, North-Western Indian Himalaya. Geomatics, Natural Hazards and Risk 9(1), 337355. doi: 10.1080/19475705.2018.1445663CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rachlewicz, G, Szczuciński, W and Ewertowski, M (2007) Post-“Little ice age” retreat rates of glaciers around Billefjorden in central Spitsbergen, Svalbard. Polish Polar Research 28(3), 159186.Google Scholar
Rajaram, R, Ganeshkumar, A and Partheeban, EC (2023) Ecological risk assessment of metals in the Arctic environment with emphasis on Kongsfjorden Fjord and freshwater lakes of Ny-Ålesund, Svalbard. Chemosphere 310, 136737. doi: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2022.136737.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rantanen, M and 7 others (2022) The Arctic has warmed nearly four times faster than the globe since 1979. Communications Earth and Environment 3, 168. doi: 10.1038/s43247-022-00498-3CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rick, B, Mcgrath, D, Armstrong, W and Mccoy, SW (2022) Dam type and lake location characterize ice-marginal lake area change in Alaska and NW Canada between 1984 and 2019. Cryosphere 16(1), 297314. doi: 10.5194/tc-16-297-2022CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Røthe, TO, Bakke, J, Støren, EWN and Bradley, RS (2018) Reconstructing Holocene glacier and climate fluctuations from lake sediments in Vårfluesjøen, Northern Spitsbergen. Frontiers in Earth Science 6, 91. doi: 10.3389/feart.2018.00091CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rouyet, L and 5 others (2021) Seasonal InSAR displacements documenting the active layer freeze and thaw progression in Central-Western Spitsbergen, Svalbard. Remote Sensing 13(15), 2977. doi: 10.3390/rs13152977CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ruman, M and 5 others (2021) A high-Arctic flow-through lake system hydrochemical changes: Revvatnet, southwestern Svalbard (years 2010–2018). Chemosphere 275, 130046. doi: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2021.130046CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schoner, W and Schoner, M (1997) Effects of glacier retreat on the outbursts of Goesvatnet, southwest Spitsbergen, Svalbard. Journal of Glaciology 43(144), 276282. doi: 10.1017/S0022143000003221CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schuler, TV and 12 others (2020) Reconciling Svalbard Glacier Mass Balance. Frontiers in Earth Science 8, 156. doi: 10.3389/feart.2020.00156CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Senese, A and 13 others (2018) Inventory of glaciers and glacial lakes of the central Karakoram national park (CKNP – Pakistan). Journal of Maps 14(2), 189198. doi: 10.1080/17445647.2018.1445561CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sentinel Hub. Available at https://www.sentinel-hub.com. Sinergise Ltd (last access: 15 May 2022).Google Scholar
Sessford, EG, Strzelecki, MC and Hormes, A (2015) Reconstruction of Holocene patterns of change in a High Arctic coastal landscape, Southern Sassenfjorden, Svalbard. Geomorphology 234, 98107. doi: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2014.12.046CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sevestre, H, Benn, DI, Hulton, NRJ and Bælum, K (2015) Thermal structure of Svalbard glaciers and implications for thermal switch models of glacier surging. Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface 120(10), 22202236. doi: 10.1002/2015JF003517CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shugar, DH and 9 others (2020) Rapid worldwide growth of glacial lakes since 1990. Nature Climate Change 10(10), 939945. doi: 10.1038/s41558-020-0855-4CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sobota, I (2014) Changes in dynamics and runoff from the High Arctic glacial catchment of Waldemarbreen, Svalbard. Geomorphology 212, 1627. doi: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2013.04.001CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sobota, I, Nowak, M and Weckwerth, P (2016) Long-term changes of glaciers in north-western Spitsbergen. Global and Planetary Change 144, 182197. doi: 10.1016/j.gloplacha.2016.07.006CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Strzelecki, MC, Long, AJ and Lloyd, JM (2017) Post-Little Ice Age development of a high arctic paraglacial beach complex. Permafrost and Periglacial Processes 28, 417. doi: 10.1002/ppp.1879CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thompson, SS, Benn, DI, Dennis, K and Luckman, A (2012) A rapidly growing moraine-dammed glacial lake on Ngozumpa Glacier, Nepal. Geomorphology 145–146, 111. doi: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2011.08.015CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tomczyk, AM, Ewertowski, MW and Carrivick, JL (2020) Geomorphological impacts of a glacier lake outburst flood in the high arctic Zackenberg river, NE Greenland. Journal of Hydrology 591, 125300. doi: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2020.125300CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ukita, J and 10 others (2011) Glacial lake inventory of Bhutan using ALOS data: methods and preliminary results. Annals of Glaciology 52(58), 6571. doi: 10.3189/172756411797252293CrossRefGoogle Scholar
van der Bilt, WGM, D'Andrea, WJ, Werner, JP and Bakke, J (2019) Early Holocene temperature oscillations exceed amplitude of observed and projected warming in Svalbard lakes. Geophysical Research Letters 46(24), 1473214741. doi: 10.1029/2019GL084384CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Veh, G and 8 others (2023) Less extreme and earlier outbursts of ice-dammed lakes since 1900. Nature 614, 701720. doi: 10.1038/s41586-022-05642-9CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Veh, G, Korup, O, von Specht, S, Roessner, S and Walz, A (2019) Unchanged frequency of moraine-dammed glacial lake outburst floods in the Himalaya. Nature Climate Change 9(5), 379383. doi: 10.1038/s41558-019-0437-5CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Viani, C, Giardino, M, Huggel, C, Perotti, L and Mortara, G (2016) An overview of glacier lakes in the Western Italian Alps from 1927 to 2014 based on multiple data sources (historical maps, orthophotos and reports of the glaciological surveys). Geografia Fisica e Dinamica Quaternaria 39(2), 203214. doi: 10.4461/GFDQ2016.39.19Google Scholar
Vilca, O, Mergili, M, Emmer, A, Holger, F and Huggel, C (2021) The 2020 glacial lake outburst flood process chain at Lake Salkantaycocha (Cordillera Vilcabamba, Peru). Landslides 18, 22112223. doi: 10.1007/s10346-021-01670-0CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vilímek, V, Klimeš, J, Emmer, A and Benešová, M (2015) Geomorphologic impacts of the glacial lake outburst flood from Lake No. 513 (Peru). Environmental Earth Sciences 73(9), 52335244. doi: 10.1007/s12665-014-3768-6CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wang, X and 9 others (2020) Glacial lake inventory of High Mountain Asia (1990–2018) derived from Landsat images. Earth System Science Data 12, 21692182. doi: 10.5194/essd-12-2169-2020CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wawrzyniak, T and Osuch, M (2020) A 40-year High Arctic climatological dataset of the Polish Polar Station Hornsund (SW Spitsbergen, Svalbard). Earth System Science Data 12(2), 805815. doi: 10.5194/essd-12-805-2020CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilson, R and 6 others (2018) Glacial lakes of the Central and Patagonian Andes. Global and Planetary Change 162, 275291. doi: 10.1016/j.gloplacha.2018.01.004CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Worni, R, Huggel, C, Clague, JJ, Schaub, Y and Stoffel, M (2014) Coupling glacial lake impact, dam breach, and flood processes: a modeling perspective. Geomorphology 224, 161176. doi: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2014.06.031CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Worni, R, Huggel, C and Stoffel, M (2013) Glacial lakes in the Indian Himalayas – from an area-wide glacial lake inventory to on-site and modeling based risk assessment of critical glacial lakes. Science of the Total Environment 468-469, 7184. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2012.11.043CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Yao, X, Liu, S, Han, L and Sun, M (2018) Definition and classification systems of glacial lake for inventory and hazards study. Journal of Geographical Sciences 28(2), 193205. doi: 10.1007/s11442-018-1467-zCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zemp, M and 6 others (2012) Fluctuations of Glaciers 2005–2010. World Glacier Monitoring Service, Zurich, Switzerland X, 336. doi: 10.5904/wgms-fog-2014-09CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhang, G, Yao, T, Xie, H, Wang, W and Yang, W (2015) An inventory of glacial lakes in the Third Pole region and their changes in response to global warming. Global and Planetary Change 131, 148157. doi: 10.1016/j.gloplacha.2015.05.013CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ziaja, W, Dudek, J and Ostafin, K (2016) Landscape transformation under the Gåsbreen glacier recession since 1899, southwestern Spitsbergen. Polish Polar Research 37(2), 155172. doi: 10.1515/popore-2016-0010CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ziaja, W and Ostafin, K (2007) Współczesna przemiana przemiana krajobrazu lodowca Gas i okolicy. Abiotyczne środowisko Spitsbergenu w latach 2005–2006 w warunkach globalnego ocieplenia, 235245.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. Map of Svalbard showing the regions used in this study.Source: base map from Norwegian Polar Institute and ESRI.

Figure 1

Table 1. Summary of remote sensing data sources and types used to construct the inventory of glacial lakes

Figure 2

Table 2. Glacial lake types in Svalbard (2008–2012) categorised according to the classification schemes by Emmer and others (2016) and Yao and others (2018)

Figure 3

Figure 2. Flow chart showing the data compilation and processing.

Figure 4

Table 3. Long-term changes of glacial lakes in Svalbard with a full coverage record (1930s–2020) for analysed time periods

Figure 5

Figure 3. Uncertainty of lake area assessment for the period 1930s–2020.Source: base map from Norwegian Polar Institute.

Figure 6

Figure 4. Classification of glacial lakes in different regions of Svalbard.

Figure 7

Figure 5. The distribution of glacial lake types in Svalbard based on the classification by Emmer and others (2016). Source: base map from Norwegian Polar Institute.

Figure 8

Figure 6. Spatial distribution of (a) moraine-dammed lakes in Svalbard: (a.1) frontal moraine-dammed lake at Holmströmbreen, Morabreen and Orsabreen, (a.2) lateral moraine-dammed lake at Storskavlen, (a.3) moraine-thaw lake at Eidembreen; (b) ice-dammed lakes in Svalbard: (b.1) advancing-glacier ice-dammed lake at Etonbreen, (b.2) other ice-dammed lake at Backabreen, (b.3) other ice-dammed lake at Flòtbreen; (c) bedrock-dammed lakes in Svalbard: (c.1) cirque lake, (c.2) glacial valley lake at Longstaffbreen, (c.3) another glacial erosion lake at Buldrebreen.Source: base map from Norwegian Polar Institute and Sentinel satellite images.

Figure 9

Figure 7. Surface areas of glacial lakes in Svalbard in (a) the 1930s, (b) the 1990s, (c) 2008–2012, (d) 2013–2019, and (e) 2020.Source: base map from Norwegian Polar Institute.

Figure 10

Figure 8. Examples of rapid changes in glacial lakes in Svalbard: (a) Lake Gandvatnet, (b) Lake Trebrevatnet, and (c) Lake Vetterndammen.Source: based on Sentinel and Landsat satellite images.

Figure 11

Figure 9. Statistical approach of median centres of glacial lake types and their relationship with the directional distribution of lake basins.Source: base map from Norwegian Polar Institute.

Figure 12

Table 4. Types of glacial lakes and their bedrock geology

Figure 13

Figure 10. (a–e) Distribution of glacial lakes with 50 m a.s.l. altitude increments. (f) Distribution of the altitude of glacial lakes showing signs of drainage events.

Figure 14

Figure 11. Spatial distribution of glacial lakes drainage events in Svalbard during the period 1936–2020.Base map from Norwegian Polar Institute (2020b).

Figure 15

Table 5. Changes of glacial lakes in Svalbard from the 1930s to 2020

Supplementary material: File

Wieczorek et al. supplementary material

Wieczorek et al. supplementary material 1

Download Wieczorek et al. supplementary material(File)
File 2.3 MB
Supplementary material: File

Wieczorek et al. supplementary material

Wieczorek et al. supplementary material 2

Download Wieczorek et al. supplementary material(File)
File 13.4 KB