Introduction
Within a few hundred metres of the terminus of Berendon Glacier, British Columbia, a copper processing plant has operated for 5 years (1970-75). Warm waste water, at 30°C, is discharged directly on to the glacier margin. Collapsed caverns, ice-walled canyons, natural bridges and caves have developed in an assemblage of forms normally described as glacier thermokarst (Reference FrenchFrench, 1976). This paper reviews the conditions associated with glacier thermokarst, examines the evolution of Berendon Glacier thermokarst over 5 years and summarizes the effects of pumping warm water on to an active glacier terminus.
Glacier Thermokarst
Sub-surface thermal erosion by melt water of caverns and a variety of subsequent collapse features in glacier ice are now often expressed as analogous to those developed in limestone terrane (Reference Embleton and KingEmbleton and King, 1968) and the term “thermokarst” has been used to describe the karst process in glacier or ground ice (Reference SweetingSweeting, 1972; Reference HealyHealy, 1975; Reference FrenchFrench, 1976). Reference ClaytonClayton (1964) was the first to consider the topography of stagnant glaciers in terms of a karst cycle. “Ice-sinks” formed by roof collapse of subglacial caverns, natural bridges and blind valleys were described on stagnant ice of Malaspina and Martin River Glaciers, Alaska. It is held generally that, for glacier thermokarst to develop, glacier ice must be stagnant and heavily mantled with supraglacial debris (Reference ClaytonClayton, 1964; Reference Embleton and KingEmbleton and King, 1968; Reference JenningsJennings, 1971; Reference SweetingSweeting, 1972); the absence of glacier movement and a thick protective debris layer allows englacial and basal melt to predominate over surface melt rates. The surface morphology is controlled subsequently, from below, by the sub-surface pattern of ice wastage. Basal melt rates in temperate valley glaciers are normally low (Reference PatersonPaterson, 1969) and a thick debris cover is a necessary factor in retarding surface-ice ablation. Thick debris covers are usually associated with inactive ice of terminal areas possessing low surface gradients and where ice-cored moraines may be a feature of the ice margin. In such conditions, thermokarst may be a natural mechanism for de-icing ice-cored moraines (Reference HealyHealy, 1975).
Where ice is active and relatively debris-free, enhanced basal and englacial melt rates may occur as a result of the release of ice-dammed water (Reference MouginMougin, 1934; Reference De BoerDe Boer, 1949), volcanism (Reference ThorarinssonThorarinsson, 1953) or concentrated channel flow by melt waters on ice margins or termini where ice is thin and where enhanced basal melt is more likely to be expressed at the surface (Reference HaefeliHaefeli, 1951; Reference PaigePaige, 1956; Reference LoeweLoewe, 1957; Reference LliboutryLliboutry, 1964-65). These have not normally been considered criteria for the development of glacier thermokarst, yet a review of the literature reveals many further examples. For example, Reference MouginMougin (1934) reported glacier-surface depressions associated with the 1892 Glacier de Tête Rousse outburst near Mount Blanc. Reference De BoerDe Boer (1949) described surface depressions and associated concentric crevasse patterns from Leirbreen, Norway, where water from ice-marginal lakes had drained through subglacial tunnels which later collapsed. Reference ThorarinssonThorarinsson (1953) attributed the 40 km2 Grímsvötn depression in Vatnajökull, Iceland, to volcanically induced, accelerated basal melt.
Reference StokesStokes (1958) described channel formation by the collapse of ice roofs at Flatisen, Norway, and a similar process may have been responsible for the large (1.5 km long) ice-walled canyon observed by Reference RussellRussell (1893) near an easterly margin of Malaspina Glacier. Ice-cavern collapse and ice-wall exfoliation was termed “subglacial stoping” or “block caving” by McCall (in Reference PaigePaige, 1956). Paige described stoping phenomena from the active ice of the terminal zone of Black Rapids Glacier, Alaska. There, ice canyons, with 23-30 m side walls, marked the exit of a large meandering subglacial stream revealed through cavern-roof collapse. Enhanced and strongly localized basal melt rates were expressed up-glacier in concentric crescentic crevasse patterns along the meandering course of the subglacial stream. Lliboutry (1964-65) described circular concentric crevasses from Glaciar Juncal Sud, generated at the margins of subglacial caverns. Reference Hashimoto, Hashimoto, Shimizu and NakamuraHashimoto and others (1966) described a similar crevasse pattern from the active ice of Antler Glacier, Alaska; a type of crevassing known in the Icelandic literature as “undirvarp” (Reference AhlmannAhlmann, 1938; personal communication from K. Thome). Reference Halliday and AndersonHalliday and Anderson (1970) reported exploration of the Paradise ice caves within Paradise Glacier, Mt Rainier National Park, Washington; collapse sinks connecting subglacial caves with the glacier surface have been described and distinguished from moulins.
Berendon Glacier: The Physical Setting
Berendon Glacier (lat. 56º 15' N., long. 130° 05' W.) occupies an eastward-facing 53 km2 drainage basin in the Boundary Ranges of the northern Coast Mountains of British Columbia, one of the major metal-mining areas of western Canada. The glacier consists of North and South Arms which coalesce 2.2 km above the terminus and subsequently flow eastward into the Bowser River valley. In the terminal area, South Arm ice approaches a prominent granodiorite barrier between Summit Lake and the Salmon Glacier drainage system to the south, and Tide Lake Flats and the Bowser River drainage system to the north (Fig. 1). Summit Lake is impounded by Salmon Glacier to the south; up to the mid-1960's lake-overspill water flowed north across the divide into the Berendon Glacier basin and subsequently into Bowser River. The catastrophic drainage or “jökulhlaup” of Summit Lake to the south under Salmon Glacier has been described by Gilbert (1972, unpublished) and Mathews (1965, 1973). Annual lake levels since 1971 have not attained those reached earlier and lake-overspill waters no longer escape to the north. With further thinning and recession of Salmon Glacier, complete drainage of Summit Lake can be expected. A similar history has been attributed to Tide Lake Flats 5 km to the north, where varved lake clays and subaerially eroded deltas and the historical record provide evidence of prior glacial-lake ponding (Reference HansonHanson, 1932; Reference HaumannHaumann, 1960).
Berendon Glacier has attracted much interest recently by its proximity to copper-concentrating facilities and a mine access tunnel portal controlled by the Granduc Operating Company of Vancouver. The glacier terminus lies within 20 m of the plant which commenced full-scale production in 1970. Berendon Glacier is presently experiencing recession. The location of the mill has raised concern over the future activity of Berendon Glacier (Reference Untersteiner and NyeUntersteiner and Nye, 1968; Reference Fisher and JonesFisher and Jones, 1971). McMechan (unpublished) has calculated the net specific balance of Berendon Glacier for the years 1968-72 and recorded more positive balances. Thus the possibility of terminal re-advance must be seriously entertained. The position of the terminus along its eastern and southern margins is controlled, unintentionally, by the release of warm waste mill water at 30°C from the copper-concentrating process. Waste water is discharged continuously year round at the rate of 13 500 1/min and has effected considerable thermal erosion of the glacier terminus.
The glacier terminus
More than two-thirds of the terminal margin butts on to a sharp break of slope, where granodiorite of the Summit Lake stock disappears beneath a deep silt-covered glacier bed.
Ice depth in the area of discussion is approximately 30 m and ice flow, which is strongly compressive in the terminal area, averages 28 m year-1.
Warm waste water enters the glacier to the north of a prominent mine-tailings dump (Fig. 1). It penetrates directly to the bed of South Arm ice through a large ice cave, the side walls of which are actively exfoliating. The mill water flows to the north in a large subglacial tunnel (Fig. 2) before emerging in an ice-walled amphitheatre, the southern termination of an open ice-walled canyon which empties to the north. When inspected toward the end of the melt season (1975), the channel was undisturbed except for a roof or bridge of debris-covered ice adjacent to the terminal outcrop of a large medial moraine present along the centre line of the glacier. The mill stream occupies the canyon floor and the northward course of the mill stream is determined by the sharp break in slope between the granodiorite barrier and the glacier bed; the stream is orientated along and against the “toe” of the granodiorite. The lower bedrock slope is marked by a fringing ice berm 15 m wide and of similar depth (Fig. 3) forming the eastern containing ice wall of the canyon. Ablating, partly debris-filled moulin shafts can be distinguished in the canyon walls. The fringing ice berm is connected with active glacier ice only in the south where it adjoins terminal ice of South Arm on which prominent medial moraines crop out (Figs 1 and 3). Measurements in a subglacial tunnel under the ice berm indicate that the ice berm is sliding down the bedrock slope, i.e. exhibits up-glacier movement. Ice falls from the walls of the ice-walled canyon and the large amphitheatre are common. On the surface ice around the latter, a concentric crescentic crevasse pattern (Reference PaigePaige, 1956) has developed, transected by a splaying crevasse system; failure of rectangular ice blocks results and the inner margins of the canyon are marked by a chaos of fallen ice.
The development of glacier karst
Analysis of air photographs (1961-74) and field observations during 1975 permit interpretation of features found in the terminal area of Berendon Glacier.
1961 air photography (Fig. 4a) depicts a lobate ice front during the height of the melt season. Summit Lake overflow water in its passage northward into the Bowser River drainage system maintains an ice-marginal course, resulting in local trimming and steepening of the ice front. Subglacial penetration only occurred near the large central medial moraine.
1964 and 1965 air photographs (not shown) and 1969 (Fig. 4b) depict ice thinning and terminal recession away from the granodiorite divide area. Subglacial penetration of Summit Lake water at the time of the 1964 air photography is suggested by the absence of thermal erosion of the ice front by marginal melt streams. By 1968, Summit Lake water had been diverted by Granduc Operating Company construction of the mill site; full-scale mill production and release of waste mill water commenced in the fall of 1970.
By 1972 (Fig. 4c), marked ice-surface depressions 75 m in diameter and attendant concentric crescentic crevassing were present. A linear depression 50 m wide terminates in an oval-shaped, intensely crevassed depression close to the central medial moraine and is marked by local enhanced recession and cave formation.
By 1974 (Fig. 4d), the central circular depression had moved over 100 m down-glacier and collapse and enlargement had occurred in analogous fashion to the formation of dolines in limestone. Foundering of the ice roof had also occurred along the linear depression demarcating a subglacial tunnel; sections of the roof formed natural bridges in 1975. Enlargement of the ice cave at the inlet of mill waters and isolation of the fringing ice berm at the foot of the granodiorite rock barrier had also occurred.
Discussion
The development of the surface morphology on terminal ice has been determined by the pattern of subglacial erosion effected by mill water. The northward-trending linear surface trough apparent in the 1972 air photography demarcates the mill stream aligned along the foot of the granodiorite rock barrier: the circular surface depressions or “sinks” have developed where mill-stream flow is concentrated by projecting bedrock spurs resulting in ice-cavern formation. Subglacial ice caves have been generated from the progressive thermal erosion by mill water. In the summer of 1975 these were penetrated for some distance. The development of open ice-walled channels from the enlargement of subglacial channels followed by the collapse of the ice roof is analogous to gorge formation in limestone. Where sections of the roof remain, natural bridges are formed. Sections of the roof which survived into 1975 along the ice-walled canyon were debris-covered and may have survived longer as the result of such protecting debris.
The progressive foundering of the cavern roofs, resulting in an ice-walled amphitheatre has been accompanied by concentric crescentic crevassing, as described in the glacier-thermokarst literature. The down-glacier movement of the whole assemblage of thermokarst features implies a continuing control over subglacial water routes once the thermokarst tunnels have been initiated.
Terminal recession
Terminal recession of Berendon Glacier has accelerated since 1970 with the action of warm mill waters (Rogerson and Eyles, unpublished). Prior to 1970, recession was a seasonal phenomenon which alternated with winter freeze-up and still-stand. It is likely that this has been replaced by continuous recession due to the year-round outfall of waste mill-water. This may result in the rapid destruction of glacier thermokarst, as the ice front recedes up-slope from the point of warm-water discharge.
Summary
Thermokarst in clean, active terminal ice of Berendon Glacier, British Columbia, has been generated by the release of warm (30°C) mill waters from a copper-concentrating plant, enhancing basal and englacial melt rates. These features include ice-walled canyons, natural bridges, unroofed caverns and “block-caving” or “subglacial stoping” activity and crescentic concentric crevasses, the result of locally enhanced basal melt controlling surface-ice morphology. A literature review indicates that features of a thermokarst origin have been observed elsewhere on active, generally debris-free glacier ice. Published models of thermokarst developed on glacier ice emphasize too greatly the prerequisite of stagnant, heavily debris-covered ice for the development of thermokarst. The sufficient factor in its development is the predominance of greatly enhanced basal and englacial ablation over rates of supraglacial melt.
Acknowledgements
The research embodied in this paper was part of a larger project financed by an Environment Canada, Water Research Incentives grant (5043-5-5-103 1975). Granduc Operating Company of Vancouver provided generous base-camp support.