Volume changes /2012 of glaciers in the

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Volume changes 2 211/212 of glaciers in the Patagonia Icefields from TanDEM X and SRTM data Wael Abdel Jaber 1, Dana Floricioiu 1, Helmut Rott 2, Björn Sass³ 1) German Aerospace Center (DLR), (IMF), Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany 2) Institute for Meteorology and Geophysics, University of Innsbruck, Austria 3) Friedrich Alexander Universität, Erlangen, Germany TanDEM X Science Team Meeting, Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany, 12 14 June 213

The South Patagonia Icefield (SPI) SPI extension: 35 km S.Mean width:35 km. First glacier inventory by Aniya et al. (1996): 48 major outlet glaciers (see map) 1+ small cirque and valley glaciers Most major glaciers calving into: freshwater lakes orth Patagonia Icefield (PI) Lat: 73 35 W Lon: 46 2 to 47 4 S Area: 4,2 km² South Patagonia Icefield (SPI) Lat: 73 3 W Lon: 48 2 to 51 3 S Area: 13, km 2 PI SPI GC Pacific ocean fjords Most of major glaciers exhibit strong mass loss trends over the last decades, except Pio XI and Perito Moreno. CD Confirmed by low resolution mass trends obtained by GRACE gravity fields analysis [1]. [1] Jacob T. et al, Recent contributions of glaciers and ice caps to sea level rise, ature, 212 Aniya et al., 1996 Source: www.glaciologia.cl 2

SRTM & TanDEM X data Well suited multitemporal elevation dataset for mass balance estimation: Both DEM from SAR bistatic interferometry Both DEMs acquired in a relatively short time span Temporal baseline: 11 12 years allows detecting slower changes in elevation SRTM Acquisition: 11 22 February 2 C band DEM: USGS release 2. calibrated with ICESat altitude tie points (DFD) [1] TanDEM X Integrated TanDEM X Processor (ITP): CoSSC data RawDEMs 19 RawDEMs (of which 4 with dual baseline phase unwrapping) (17 desc., 2 asc.) 211: 8 scenes in austral summer + 2 scenes in winter Early 212: 9 scenes in summer Issues: Accurate coregistration of both DEMs Possible biases in DEM difference due to different DEM spatial resolution Radar signal penetration in ice/snow related to: physical parameters of snow and ice (liquid water content, ice compactness, ) system parameters (radar frequency, incidence angle) [1] Felbier A., Ausgleichung langwelliger Höhenfehler in SRTM mit Kugelflächenfunktionen auf Basis ausgewählter ICESat Daten, TUM, 29 3

Ice and snow surface conditions During SRTM QuikSCAT: Ku band backscattering (σ ) SIR products*: SPI 5 During TanDEM X Active channel of bistatic acquisition: X band backscattering (σ ) P. Moreno Gl. 1 15 2 σ [db] 25 1 13 Feb. 2 14 17 Feb. 2 18 21 Feb. 2 3 17 Feb. 211 (winter scene) Feb. 2 (summer): 1 < σ < 2 db wet glacier surface σ < 7 db on glacier plateau (θ i = 39 ) wet glacier surface TDM acquisitions mostly in summer, only 2 acquisitions in winter SRTM and TanDEM X acquired with wet conditions on the firn area penetration depth is negligible * Courtesy Matthias Reif, IMGI, Univ. of Innsbruck 4

Applied procedure for dh/dt derivation TDM scene CoSSC pair ITP Coregistered SRTM DEM TDM RawDEM RawDEM validation - SRTM on ice free areas - ICESat GLAS tracks (23-29) - Overlapping TDM scenes OK? yes no new APO estimation TDM RawDEM - RawDEM Flag Mask (FLM) - Thresholding h image - Manual selection h h/ t PU error masking ITP: Integrated TanDEM X Processor APO: Absolute Phase Offset PU: Phase Unwrapping Mosaicking 5

Jorge Montt SPI: ice elevation change rate 2 211/212 Most glacier termini ( 14m) display a significant thinning trend Occidental Pio XI O Higgins Exceptions: Pio XI and Perito Moreno On the plateau (14 36 m): thinning signal in the E part and equilibrium on West side and South sector Viedma Upsala Ameghino P. Moreno +8 +4 Grey Tyndall m a 1 4 25 5 km 8 6

Perito Moreno and Ameghino: ice elevation change 2 211 h= 2 m Ameghino Gl. ICESat h= 7 m Perito Moreno Gl. +1 Perito Moreno (area: 258 km²) front stable with periodical damming events no significant elevation changes Ameghino (area: 76 km²) Front in retreat.8 km (72.7 m a 1 ) [2 11] 3.5 km (152 m a 1 ) [ 7 93] : large proglacial lake Significant surface lowering mostly below equilibrium line 6.4 m a 1 [2 11] near current front 2.3 m a 1 [ 49 93] near 93 snout (Aniya et al., 96) P. Ameghino Moreno +5 m 5.3 m a 1 8.5 m a 1 5 1 7

Pio XI: ice elevation change 2 212 Largest calving glacier of SPI Area: 1265 km². Length: 64 km. Tidewater glacier h=+4 m Front advance: +1.97 km [2 212] (18 m a 1) 1.97 km Front: Feb. 2 Front: Feb. 212 +1 h=+5 m h=+15 m +5 m Only main glacier with increased surface elevation trend h > +5 m (+4.4 ma 1) at 4.5 km from front Slight elevation increase on upper part: h = +15 m (+1.25 ma 1) 5 1 Average ice thickening on ablation area: +2.2 ma 1 [ 75 95] (Rivera and Casassa, 1999) 8

Jorge Montt Glacier: ice surface thinning and front retreat Area: 5 km². Length: 41 km. Ice thinning up to 18 ma 1 concentrated below 9 m a.s.l. (near equilibrium line) where the glacier flows in a steep bed and temperatures are higher. Front retreat: 1.9 km (173 ma 1 ). Thinning rate of 3.3 ma 1 (average on whole glacier) and 18 ma 1 at lower elevations [1975 2]. Front retreat: 8.5 km (34 ma 1 ) (ASA, CECS) Front retreat >8 ma 1 [Feb. 21 Jan. 211] (Rivera et al. [1]) Centro de Estudios Cientificos (CECS), Chile [1] Rivera, A., Koppes, M., Bravo, C., Aravena, J. C., Little Ice Age advance and retreat of Glaciar Jorge Montt, Chilean Patagonia, Climate of the Past, 8, pp. 43 414, 212. 9

Jorge Montt: ice elevation change 2 211 Front Feb. 2 A 1.9 km Front May 211 (3) (2) h= 12 m H=63 m B +25 +125 B (1) h= 98 m H=79 m m (3) h= 28 m H=13 m (1) (2) 125 25 ICESat A Front retreat 1.9 km 1

Occidental Jorge Montt O Higgins Glacier mask and Area Elevation Distribution SRTM DEM (yr. 2) used as reference Glacier mask: improvement of Randolph Glacier Inventory (RGI) with: LADSAT 7 ETM (year: 21 23) DSI = (b2 b5)/(b2+b5) SRTM DEM (glacier fronts) Glacier area (yr. 2) 1287 km² Pio XI SRTM DEM yr. 2 Viedma Upsala Ameghino P. Moreno Grey Tyndall 36 27 18 9 Area [km²] 14 13 12 11 1 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Area Elevation Distribution (AED) for SRTM DEM (2) Bin area > 8 km² Altitude [m] AED yr. 2 AED yr. 2 for TDM coverage 25 5 km m 11

Occidental Pio XI Jorge Montt O Higgins Glacier mask and Area Elevation Distribution SRTM DEM (yr. 2) used as reference Glacier mask: improvement of Randolph Glacier Inventory (RGI) with: LADSAT 7 ETM (year: 21 23) DSI = (b2 b5)/(b2+b5) SRTM DEM (glacier fronts) Glacier area (yr. 2) 1287 km² Glacier area covered with TDM data 1194 km² (92.8%) Glacier area with missing TDM data 93 km² (7.2%) Viedma Upsala Ameghino P. Moreno Grey Area % [km²] 14 1 13 9 12 11 8 1 7 9 6 8 7 5 6 4 5 4 3 3 2 2 1 1 Area Elevation Glacier Distribution area not covered (AED) by for TDM SRTM (%) DEM (2) Glacier AED area yr. 2 not covered by TDM (%) AED yr. 2 for TDM coverage Tyndall Bin area > 8 km² Altitude [m] 25 5 km 12

Jorge Montt SPI: mass balance Mean dh/dt for each altitude bin (2 m) computed on bin area covered by TDM Occidental O Higgins Pio XI Viedma 4 3 Mean Elevation Change Rate (dh/dt) Mean Elevation Change Rate Area Elevation Distribution yr. 2 3 25 Upsala 2 Ameghino P. Moreno +8 +4 dh/dt [m/yr] 1 1 2 2 15 1 Area [km²] m a 1 3 5 Grey 4 Tyndall 4 2 4 6 8 1 12 14 16 18 2 Altitude [m] 22 24 26 28 3 32 34 36 25 5 km 8 13

Occidental Jorge Montt O Higgins SPI: mass balance Mean dh/dt for each altitude bin (2 m) computed on bin area covered by TDM Mean dv/dt = (dh/dt) * (AED of yr 2) scaling data up to entire glacier surface dm/dt = (dv/dt) * ρ ice. Ice density ρ ice = 9 kg/m³ Overall mass balance: Pio XI Time period 2 211/ 12 SPI total area Area covered by TDM Mean dh/dt (area weighted) Total dv/dt Total dm/dt 12868.15 km² 11941.78 km².92 m/yr 11.65 km³/yr 1.444 Gt/yr Upsala Viedma,3,2 Mean Volume Change Rate (dv/dt) Mean Volume Change Rate Ameghino P. Moreno +8 +4 dv/dt [km³/yr],1,1 m a 1,2 Grey,3 Tyndall 4 2 4 6 8 1 12 14 16 18 2 22 Altitude [m] 24 26 28 3 32 34 36 25 5 km 8 14

Occidental Jorge Montt O Higgins SPI: mass balance Mean dh/dt for each altitude bin (2 m) computed on bin area covered by TDM Mean dv/dt = (dh/dt) * (AED of yr 2) scaling data up to entire glacier surface dm/dt = (dv/dt) * ρ ice. Ice density ρ ice = 9 kg/m³ Global mass balance: Pio XI Time period 2 211/ 12 SPI total area Area covered by TDM Mean dh/dt (area weighted) Total dv/dt Total dm/dt 12868.15 km² 11941.78 km².92 m/yr 11.65 km³/yr 1.444 Gt/yr Upsala Viedma,25,2,15,1 Mean Mass Change Rate (dm/dt) Mean Mass Change Rate Ameghino P. Moreno +8 +4 dm/dt [Gt/yr],5,5,1,15 m a 1,2 Grey,25 Tyndall 4 2 4 6 8 1 12 14 16 18 2 22 Altitude [m] 24 26 28 3 32 34 36 25 5 km 8 15

Gran Campo evado (53 S): ice elevation change Analysis by: Björn Sass, FAU Erlangen W h S E 1.1 km Area GC Icefield + adjacent glaciers [27]: 252.6 km² (Schneider et al, 27) TanDEM X: 2 descending scenes, dual baseline processing oroeste Gl. h= 8 m Temporal baseline: Feb. 2 Feb. 212 Front retreat of oroeste Glacier: 1.1 km ( 91.6 ma 1 ) h = 8 m (6.7 ma 1 ) near main calving front of oroeste Glacier (1 m a.s.l.) 16

Conclusions TanDEM X and SRTM data were used to derive temporal trends of ice elevation change in the SPI and GC for the period 2 211/ 12. An overall mass balance was derived, necessary for estimating the contribution of the Patagonia Icefields to sea level rise. Contrasting behavior is observed on different glaciers with respect to changes in ice elevation and front position. This emphasizes the importance of spatially detailed repeated observations in order to understand the complexity of glacier response to climate change. The method will be applied to the remaining Patagonian icefields (PI, Cordillera Darwin). ear future work: Error budget estimation for the DEM difference Estimation of ice mass loss due to frontal retreat, including subsurface ice loss Thank you for your attention! 17

Upsala: ice elevation change 211 2 Front retreat: 3.4 km [Feb. 2 May 211] (.3 m a 1 ) h> 16 m (14.5 m a 1 ) near main calving front h~ 11 m (1 m a 1 ) on tributaries Bertacchi and Cono h= 3 to 4 m (1 m a 1 ) near equilibrium line (12 m a.s.l) Dynamic thinning due to acceleration and large calving events. Viedma Gl. Field survey: 9.5 to 14 m a 1 [ 91 93] (aruse et al., 1997) ICESat h= 35 m h= 5 m Cono Gl. Upsala Gl. +16 +8 m Bertacchi Gl. Cono Gl. h= 16 m 8 Bertacchi Gl. 3.4 km 16 18

Grey, Tyndall, Asia, Amalia: ice elevation changes Tyndall Gl.: 6.3 ma 1 on terminus [2 11] 4.9 ma 1 average [ 93 99] (Raymond et al. 2) Asia h= m Amalia h= 1 m Frias h= 55 m Grey h= 6 m Grey Gl.: 5.4 ma 1 on east terminus 3.6 ma 1 on main terminus 6.5 ma 1 on west terminus HPS 38 h= 65 m +1 +5 m Grey Glacier, front. Photo: Dana Floricioiu, DLR HPS 38 h= 75 m 5 Tyndall h= 7 m 1 19

O Higgins, Bernardo, Occidental: ice elevation changes Bernardo h= 5 m Bravo h= 75 m Tempano h= 5 m Occidental h= 55 m O Higgins h= 25 m Greve h= 45 m +1 +5 HPS 8 h= 12 m m HPS 9 h= 3 m Chico h= 35 m 5 1 O Higgins: 2.5 ma 1 on terminus [2 12] Glacier with strong historical retreat trend: 14.6 km during the period 1896 1995 (Casassa et al., 1997) 2

SPI ice elevation and volume change 2 211/212 Total SPI area [km 2 ] Area covered by TanDEM X [km 2 ] Time period 12826.39 11354.67 2 211/12 Volume change rate [km 3 yr 1 ] 11.83 1.65 Mass change rate [Gt yr 1 ] Author Data source Area covered Time period Volume change rate [km 3 yr 1 ] Mass change rate [Gt yr 1 ] Jacob et al, 212 GRACE SPI and PI Jan. 23 Dec. 21 23 ±9 Ivins et al, 211 GRACE SPI and PI Jan. 23 Mar. 29 26 ±6 Rignot et al, 23 DEM diff. (cartogra phy & SRTM) SPI 1975 2 1995 2 13. ±.8 38.7 ± 4.4 Willis et al, GRL, 212 DEM diff (ASTER & SRTM) SPI PI 2 212 2 211 22.2±1.3 4.9±.3 2. ± 1.17 4.4 ±.27 EO & cryosphere science, ESA ESRI, Frascati, 13 16 ov.212 21

Perito Moreno and Ameghino: ice velocities Ameghino Gl. Perito Moreno Gl. Area: Perito Moreno: 258 km², Ameghino: 76 km². Ice velocity map 3 May 211 / 14 May 211 (11 days) P. Moreno and Ameghino: light seasonal variability constant annual mean velocity (28 212) agreement with GPS and InSAR [1] 6. 4.5 3. m/day 1.5. Photo: H. Steinberg [1] Stuefer, M., H. Rott, and P. Skvarca, Glaciar Perito Moreno, Patagonia: climate sensitivities and glacier characteristics preceding the 23/4 and 25/6 damming events, Journal of Glaciology, 53 (18), pp. 3 16, 27. 22

Upsala Glacier: ice velocities January 28 October 28 May 29 October 29 Upsala Glacier area: 92 km² February 21 July 21 March 211 October 211 1. 7.5 5. m/day 2.5 2.1 km. Front: Jan. 8 23

Pio XI: ice velocity 5. 3.75 2.5 m/day 1.25. Largest calving glacier of SPI Area: 1265 km². Length: 64 km. Tidewater glacier Ice velocity map 3 May 211 / 14 May 211 Velocities from 1 to 5 md 1 at the bend. Photo: Ralf Rosenau, TU Dresden 24

Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) ASA/DLR mission: semi global DEM by means of single pass interferometry Acquisition: 11 22 February 2 Coverage: 56 S to 6 Bistatic interferometric system: C band: full coverage X band: partial coverage (gaps) C band DEM spatial posting: 3arcsec(9 m) ominal vertical accuracy (9% linear point to point error): Relative: 1 m / Absolute: 16 m ominal horizontal accuracy (9% circular error): Relative: 15 m / Absolute: 2 m DEM available at DFD is calibrated with ICESat altitude tie points increased accuracy ICESat (Ice, Cloud, and land Elevation Satellite) ASA mission 23 29 Geoscience Laser Altimeter System (GLAS) space borne LIDAR altimeter Footprint: 65 m of diameter. Sampling distance: 17 m. 25

TanDEM X and ITP Objective: global DEM by means of single pass interferometry Bistatic interferometric system in X band Launch: June 21 ominal relative vertical accuracy (9% linear point to point error): 2 m (less than 2% slopes), 4 m (more than 2% slopes) ominal relative horizontal accuracy (9% circular error): 4 m Integrated TanDEM X Processor (ITP) used to generate RawDEMs from CoSSC data RawDEM mean asbolute vertical error globally below 3 m 19 RawDEMs processedwithitp (acquired: 211 and early 212) 4 RawDEMs dual baseline phase unwrapping 21 m TanDEM X DEM: O Higgins Glacier (SPI) 3 m 26