A simplified method to estimate the run-off in Periglacial Creeks: A case study of King George Islands, Antarctic Peninsula

Although the relationship between surface air temperature and glacial discharge has been studied in the Northern Hemisphere for at least a century, similar studies for Antarctica remain scarce and only for the past four decades. This data scarcity is due to the extreme meteorological conditions and...

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Autores principales: Falk, U., Silva-Busso, A., Pölcher, P.
Formato: JOUR
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_1364503X_v376_n2122_p_Falk
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spelling todo:paper_1364503X_v376_n2122_p_Falk2023-10-03T16:10:59Z A simplified method to estimate the run-off in Periglacial Creeks: A case study of King George Islands, Antarctic Peninsula Falk, U. Silva-Busso, A. Pölcher, P. Antarctic Peninsula Climatic change Glacial discharge Permafrost hydrology Run-off Atmospheric temperature Catchments Fourier analysis Glacial geology Runoff Sea level Antarctic Peninsula Climatic changes Field observations Global sea level rise Meteorological condition Northern Hemispheres Permafrost hydrology Surface air temperatures Monte Carlo methods Although the relationship between surface air temperature and glacial discharge has been studied in the Northern Hemisphere for at least a century, similar studies for Antarctica remain scarce and only for the past four decades. This data scarcity is due to the extreme meteorological conditions and terrain inaccessibility. As a result, the contribution of glacial discharge in Antarctica to global sea-level rise is still attached with great uncertainties, especially from partly glaciated hydrological basins as can be found in the Antarctic Peninsula. In this paper, we propose a simplified model based on the Monte Carlo method and Fourier analysis for estimating discharge in partly glaciated and periglacial hydrological catchments with a summer melt period. Our model offers the advantage of scarce data requirements and quick recognition of periglacial environments. Discharge was found to be highly correlated with surface air temperature for the partially glaciated hydrological catchments on Potter Peninsula, King George Island (Isla 25 Mayo). The model is simple to implement and requires few variables to make most versatile simulations. We have obtained a monthly simulated maximum flow estimates between 0.74 and 1.07 m3 s-1 for two creeks (South and North Potter) with a very good fit to field observations. The glacial mean monthly discharge during summermonths was estimated to 0.44 ± 0.02m3 s-1 for South Potter Creek and 0.55 ± 0.02m3 s-1 for North Potter Creek. This article is part of the theme issue 'The marine system of the West Antarctic Peninsula: status and strategy for progress in a region of rapid change'. © 2018 The Authors. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_1364503X_v376_n2122_p_Falk
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Antarctic Peninsula
Climatic change
Glacial discharge
Permafrost hydrology
Run-off
Atmospheric temperature
Catchments
Fourier analysis
Glacial geology
Runoff
Sea level
Antarctic Peninsula
Climatic changes
Field observations
Global sea level rise
Meteorological condition
Northern Hemispheres
Permafrost hydrology
Surface air temperatures
Monte Carlo methods
spellingShingle Antarctic Peninsula
Climatic change
Glacial discharge
Permafrost hydrology
Run-off
Atmospheric temperature
Catchments
Fourier analysis
Glacial geology
Runoff
Sea level
Antarctic Peninsula
Climatic changes
Field observations
Global sea level rise
Meteorological condition
Northern Hemispheres
Permafrost hydrology
Surface air temperatures
Monte Carlo methods
Falk, U.
Silva-Busso, A.
Pölcher, P.
A simplified method to estimate the run-off in Periglacial Creeks: A case study of King George Islands, Antarctic Peninsula
topic_facet Antarctic Peninsula
Climatic change
Glacial discharge
Permafrost hydrology
Run-off
Atmospheric temperature
Catchments
Fourier analysis
Glacial geology
Runoff
Sea level
Antarctic Peninsula
Climatic changes
Field observations
Global sea level rise
Meteorological condition
Northern Hemispheres
Permafrost hydrology
Surface air temperatures
Monte Carlo methods
description Although the relationship between surface air temperature and glacial discharge has been studied in the Northern Hemisphere for at least a century, similar studies for Antarctica remain scarce and only for the past four decades. This data scarcity is due to the extreme meteorological conditions and terrain inaccessibility. As a result, the contribution of glacial discharge in Antarctica to global sea-level rise is still attached with great uncertainties, especially from partly glaciated hydrological basins as can be found in the Antarctic Peninsula. In this paper, we propose a simplified model based on the Monte Carlo method and Fourier analysis for estimating discharge in partly glaciated and periglacial hydrological catchments with a summer melt period. Our model offers the advantage of scarce data requirements and quick recognition of periglacial environments. Discharge was found to be highly correlated with surface air temperature for the partially glaciated hydrological catchments on Potter Peninsula, King George Island (Isla 25 Mayo). The model is simple to implement and requires few variables to make most versatile simulations. We have obtained a monthly simulated maximum flow estimates between 0.74 and 1.07 m3 s-1 for two creeks (South and North Potter) with a very good fit to field observations. The glacial mean monthly discharge during summermonths was estimated to 0.44 ± 0.02m3 s-1 for South Potter Creek and 0.55 ± 0.02m3 s-1 for North Potter Creek. This article is part of the theme issue 'The marine system of the West Antarctic Peninsula: status and strategy for progress in a region of rapid change'. © 2018 The Authors.
format JOUR
author Falk, U.
Silva-Busso, A.
Pölcher, P.
author_facet Falk, U.
Silva-Busso, A.
Pölcher, P.
author_sort Falk, U.
title A simplified method to estimate the run-off in Periglacial Creeks: A case study of King George Islands, Antarctic Peninsula
title_short A simplified method to estimate the run-off in Periglacial Creeks: A case study of King George Islands, Antarctic Peninsula
title_full A simplified method to estimate the run-off in Periglacial Creeks: A case study of King George Islands, Antarctic Peninsula
title_fullStr A simplified method to estimate the run-off in Periglacial Creeks: A case study of King George Islands, Antarctic Peninsula
title_full_unstemmed A simplified method to estimate the run-off in Periglacial Creeks: A case study of King George Islands, Antarctic Peninsula
title_sort simplified method to estimate the run-off in periglacial creeks: a case study of king george islands, antarctic peninsula
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_1364503X_v376_n2122_p_Falk
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