Introduction and Rationale
Arctic glaciers and ice caps presently contribute ∼0.13 mm a−1, or >30%, of the sea-level rise from ice masses outside Antarctica and Greenland (Reference DowdeswellDowdeswell and others, 1997). The magnitude of the contribution from Arctic glaciers is perhaps surprising since >99% of all of the Earth’s water that is held up in glacier ice is found in Antarctica and Greenland (Reference Radić and HockRadić and Hock, 2011). However, the disproportionate contribution can be explained by considering that many Arctic glaciers are small and thus their mass balance can respond to climate changes much more rapidly than the major ice sheets (Reference Prowse, Prowse and OmmanneyProwse, 1990; Reference DowdeswellDowdeswell and others, 1997; Reference MunroMunro, 2000; Reference Bingham, Nienow, Sharp and CoplandBingham and others, 2006). Such small glaciers are widespread in the Arctic: the World Glacier Inventory (WGI) indicates that of >7400 glaciers in 2009 located within the Arctic (i.e. above 66°33′ N), 64.2% were ≤2 km2 in area, while 77.9% were ≤5 km2 in area (http://nsidc.org/data/g01130.html). The sensitivity of small Arctic glaciers to climatic forcings makes them very important components of the cryosphere, particularly as climate change is forecast to proceed most rapidly in the Arctic (Reference Bates, Kundzewicz, Wu and PalutikofBates and others, 2008). They have additional significance because shrinkage of Arctic glaciers has significant impacts on local stream hydrology and ecology and has direct consequences for water resource management (Reference Arendt, Echelmeyer, Harrison, Lingle and ValentineArendt and others, 2002; Reference Raper and BraithwaiteRaper and Braithwaite, 2006).
Many Arctic glaciers are commonly assumed to be polythermal (Reference Holmlund and ErikssonHolmlund and Eriksson, 1989; Reference Aschwanden and BlatterAschwanden and Blatter, 2005; cf. Reference Hutter, Blatter and FunkHutter and others, 1988; Reference Blatter and HutterBlatter and Hutter, 1991). A polythermal glacier state means that both warm and cold ice coexist. Warm (or temperate) ice is at or very close to the pressure-melting point (pmp), whereas cold ice is well below the pmp. This distinction enables whole glaciers to also be classified as warm/temperate or cold (when they consist entirely of warm or cold ice, respectively), or indeed polythermal where both types of ice exist in a single glacier. However, the nature of the polythermal structure can also vary depending on the balance between surface and subsurface processes (Reference Blatter and HutterBlatter and Hutter, 1991; Reference PetterssonPettersson, 2004; Reference Benn and EvansBenn and Evans, 2010).
Polythermal glaciers can range from being almost entirely cold, with just a small temperate basal region (type A according to the classification of Reference PetterssonPettersson, 2004), to almost entirely temperate, with just a small region of cold surface ice (type F according to the classification of Reference PetterssonPettersson, 2004), with a continuum of other intermediate structures in between. Polythermal glaciers are particularly well studied in Svalbard (Reference SchyttSchytt, 1969; Reference BjörnssonBjörnsson and others, 1996; Reference Sund and EikenSund and Eiken, 2004) and have also been documented in Sweden with the most well known being Storglaciären (Reference Holmlund and ErikssonHolmlund and Eriksson, 1989; Reference Pettersson, Jansson and HolmlundPettersson and others, 2003, Reference Pettersson, Jansson and Blatter2004; Reference Gusmeroli, Murray, Jansson, Pettersson, Aschwanden and BoothGusmeroli and others, 2010). Storglaciären is an example of a polythermal glacier that is largely temperate (predominantly warm polythermal glacier) with only a cold surface layer overlying otherwise temperate ice in the ablation area and fully temperate ice in the accumulation area (Reference Pettersson, Jansson, Huwald and BlatterPettersson and others, 2007; type E according to the classification of Reference PetterssonPettersson, 2004). The structure here arises because of the existence of porous firn in the accumulation area which can become water-saturated as a result of spring/summer snowmelt. Subsequent refreezing of this water at the firn–ice boundary produces substantial amounts of heat which leads to the formation of temperate ice (Reference Gusmeroli, Murray, Jansson, Pettersson, Aschwanden and BoothGusmeroli and others, 2010).
Elsewhere, in predominantly cold polythermal glaciers, the structure consists primarily of cold ice with only a temperate basal layer (e.g. Reference Bingham, Nienow, Sharp and CoplandBingham and others, 2006; type A according to Reference PetterssonPettersson, 2004). In this latter type, temperate ice may arise due to strain heating while ice thickness can also play a very significant role in maintaining temperate ice in the ablation area. This is because: (1) strain heating is greater under thicker ice; (2) thicker ice reduces the pmp; and (3) thicker ice has an insulating effect, keeping ice at depth warmer (Reference Bennett and GlasserBennett and Glasser, 2009), i.e. in the Arctic, cold winter temperatures can penetrate deep into a glacier, reducing ice temperature (Reference SverdrupSverdrup, 1935; Reference PatersonPaterson, 1994; Reference RippinRippin, 2002). In thicker Arctic glaciers this ‘winter cold wave’ does not penetrate through the full thickness of the glacier and so deeper ice is likely to remain temperate, whereas in very thin glaciers the cold wave might even reach the bed (Reference BjörnssonBjörnsson and others, 1996).
These conditions lead us to propose that in Arctic locations, glaciers that are small and thin are likely to consist entirely of ice that is below the pmp. This is supported by Reference MurrayMurray and others (2000, p. 13,501) who stated that ‘glacier thermal regime is strongly influenced by ice thickness’ and suggested that, in Svalbard, glaciers less than ∼100 m thick are cold throughout. Such a cold thermal state has important implications for glacier hydrology and dynamics because cold ice theoretically contains no water and thus has a dynamical regime characterized as slow, inactive and consequently with minimal geomorphological impact (cf. Reference Fischer and ClarkeFischer and Clarke, 2001; Reference WallerWaller, 2001). Similarly, the presence of a cold ablation zone in front of a temperate accumulation zone also has implications for ice dynamics and hydrology (cf. Reference RippinRippin, 2002; Reference Rippin, Willis and ArnoldRippin and others, 2005; Reference Bingham, Nienow, Sharp and CoplandBingham and others, 2006). This study therefore aims to test the hypothesis that a small thin Arctic glacier will possess an ablation area that is composed entirely of homogeneous cold ice.
Field Site
Kårsaglaciären is located in Arctic Sweden at the head of Kårsavagge ∼25 km west of Abisko in northern Sweden (Fig. 1). The glacier ranges in elevation from 1000 t∼1500 ma.s.l. and thus has an arctic climate, despite being situated within a region generally characterized as subarctic. Upper Kårsavagge (68°21′ N, 18°49′ E) includes Kårsaglaciären, which is a ∼1 km2 glacier, and several cirques that are now without permanent glacier ice (Fig. 1). Our choice of this glacier among the many small and climatically sensitive glaciers in northern Scandinavia (Reference Carrivick and BrewerCarrivick and Brewer, 2004) is motivated by a secondary aim to establish the present-day geometry and state of Kårsaglaciären. Kårsaglaciären has been studied intermittently for over 100 years (e.g. Reference SvenoniusSvenonius, 1890, Reference Svenonius1910; Reference Ahlmann and TryseliusAhlmann and Tryselius, 1929; Reference Ahlmann and LindbladAhlmann and Lindblad, 1940; Reference WallénWallén, 1948, Reference Wallén1949, Reference Wallén1959; Reference Holmlund and JanssonHolmlund and Jansson, 1999), thereby producing a 100 year record of glacier mass balance and meteorology (Abisko Scientific Research Station, http://www.linnea.com/~ans), an exceptional ice-front retreat record from 1909 to 1939 (cf. Reference KarlénKarlén, 1973) and maps recording the glacier outline in 1908, 1920, 1925, 1926, 1928, 1939, 1943 and 1961. However, despite this historical interest, study of Kårsaglaciären has been neglected recently and it is no longer included in the regional mass-balance measurements conducted out of Tarfala Research Station (personal communication from P. Jansson, 2010.
Methods
A common-offset ground-penetrating radar (GPR) survey was carried out across the lower reaches of Kårsaglaciären in March 2009. This involved collecting a total of 3191 m of GPR data. These data constituted a main east–west centre line along the lower centre of the glacier, an east–west line along an upper (southern) ‘bench’ and four lines crossing the main centre line (Fig. 1). Data were collected continuously using a pulseEKKO Pro system towed behind a snowmobile. The GPR control unit was mounted on the snowmobile, while a purpose-built antenna sledge was towed approximately 6 m behind it. The antennas were fixed parallel to one another and transverse to the survey direction, thus minimizing offline reflections (cf. Reference Murray, Booth and RippinMurray and others, 2007). Data were collected while moving continuously over the central portion of the glacier tongue, at a centre frequency of 50 MHz (Fig. 1). Real-time kinematic (RTK) differential GPS (DGPS) data were collected simultaneously via a Leica GPS500 to accurately locate the GPR on the glacier. The roving unit was mounted on the snowmobile, while the base station was located at a fixed point in the glacier forefield. In 2009 and 2010 we also made DGPS measurements of the snow surface elevation across the entire lower portion of Kårsaglaciären (Fig. 1).
The software packages ReflexW and Leica GeoOffice were used to process the GPR and DGPS data, respectively. For all GPR data, time zero was set before a filter was applied to remove low-frequency noise generated by the GPR system electronics. All data were then resampled to a uniform 0.5 m step size to account for variable sample spacing (0.5 m was chosen as this is the recommended step size for 50 MHz antennas). Data were then migrated using an FK algorithm before being bandpass-filtered with a pass band of 30–80 MHz. Finally, data were corrected topographically using the DGPS data, and two-way travel time was converted to ice thickness assuming a typical constant radar wave velocity of 0.168 m ns−1 (cf. Reference Murray, Booth and RippinMurray and others, 2007; Reference King, Smith, Murray and StuartKing and others, 2008).
Dominant reflectors in the radar data (later interpreted to be the glacier surface and glacier bed) were then picked manually using ReflexW. For the surface, we picked the first break of the first energy arrival, which strictly speaking is a combination of the airwave and the ground wave. Separating the ground wave from the airwave was not possible because of interference between the two. The resulting processed radargrams were tested for internal consistency by checking the surface and bed elevations at crossover points between intersecting GPR lines. Surface elevation crossover errors were very small, with a mean error magnitude of just ±0.07 m. Bed crossover errors had a mean magnitude of ±3.7 m. However, this mean error is distorted by measurements at a single location (Fig. 1), where the discrepancy was 10.8 m. Excluding this erroneous point, crossover errors are ±1.4 m. This smaller value is acceptable in bed error analyses of this nature.
Owing to topographical constraints, the uppermost basin could not be accessed safely, so we lack recent GPR data from this location. Instead we utilize ice-thickness data collected in spring 1992 (Reference BodinBodin, 1993) using a Mark II echo sounder with a transmit frequency of 2–10 MHz. Reference BodinBodin’s (1993) receiver was an oscilloscope, and ice depth was calculated using trigonometry between the transmitter, bottom and receiver. Here we combine these 1992 data with our 2009 survey data to facilitate the creation of a bed digital elevation model (DEM) over the whole glacier. Clearly, there are limitations in doing this, due to the use of different frequencies, as well as poorer positional accuracy and sparser measurements in the older data. To determine bed elevations from the 1992 ice-thickness measurements we subtracted them from a digitized surface elevation map derived from aerial photography collected in 1991 by the National Land Survey of Sweden (© Stockholm University). Where Reference BodinBodin’s (1993) bed elevation data coincide horizontally with our 2009 data, we compared the two in order to assess the relative accuracy of the two datasets and thus indicate the validity of combining them. Bed elevation agreement between the two datasets was assessed at locations where any of our data points fell within 10 m of Reference BodinBodin’s (1993) measurements. The mean magnitude of difference between the two datasets was 15.04 m, but one of Bodin’s points was responsible for much of this difference. By removing this point (designated erroneous by the presence of >40 2009 points within 10 m of this location and having a high degree of internal consistency), mean bed discrepancies were reduced to just 6.6 m. Given that there are many potential sources of error in the older data of Reference BodinBodin (1993), we considered this smaller error magnitude to be acceptable.
Ultimately, we therefore produced maps of surface elevation, bed elevation and ice thickness in 2010. Surface and bed DEMs were created by interpolating (using kriging) all data across the extent of the glacier before smoothing and resampling the output onto a 5 m grid (Fig. 2a and b). Ice thickness in 2010 was determined by subtracting the bed elevation grid from the ice surface grid (Fig. 2c). In a few locations, our map of ice thickness suggested the ice was of negative thickness. Clearly, this cannot be the case, so where the ice thickness was negative but of a magnitude less than the mean crossover error resulting from combining the two datasets (6.6 m) we set ice thickness to zero. This leaves a small number of areas of greater negative thickness, which are visible in Figure 2c as white areas located primarily at the snout and northern boundary of the glacier. The two largest of these areas near the snout are exactly where ice tunnels have collapsed, revealing portals (personal communication from P. Holmlund, 2010) and ice thickness was indeed close to zero.
Results and Analysis
Figure 3 is an example of the data collected during our survey, showing the longest profile running west–east. This figure is typical of the radar data collected, in that there are two dominant reflectors, an upper surface reflection and a lower basal reflection, which are largely visible throughout. In Figure 3, the two reflectors merge at the snout (∼850 m along transect) and here the basal reflector is slightly obscured by a zone of intense scattering of the GPR signal (Fig. 3). This zone appears to extend throughout the entire thickness of the snout and to end quite abruptly ∼650–700 m along transect. Such a zone of scattering is also identified in the lowermost cross-glacier line and in a small section of the southernmost isolated line. The basal reflector is partially obscured where these zones of scatter appear. In Figure 3, the basal reflector behind this zone of intense scattering drops in elevation and at the same time a substantial reflection-free zone is evident. This reflection-free zone persists between ∼360 and 680 m along transect. From ∼220 to 360 m along transect, there is perhaps some sparse evidence of more scattering over a slightly raised area. Beyond this, the ice thins and scattering becomes very sparse again. Overall our GPR data are largely scatter-free and where scattering occurs it is made up of a series of individual point reflectors, which in unmigrated radar data appear as hyperbolae (Fig. 4).
We interpret the upper reflection as the ice surface and the lower basal reflection as the glacier bed. We interpret the area where the basal reflection drops away as being an overdeepening in the basal bedrock. The raised area is a bedrock bump.
Many of our radar data are interpreted as being free of internal scattering due to the presence of cold ice that does not contain liquid water. Thus there is minimal or no return of radar energy from within the ice. In contrast, the scattering zones in our data are similar to those observed within GPR data from glaciers in environments as diverse as the High Arctic and the European Alps. In these environments, GPR scatter zones are frequently attributed to the presence of warmer ice containing liquid water (Reference Murray, Booth and RippinMurray and others, 2007). This link between scattering and the presence of temperate ice has been clarified by comparing the radar-derived thermal structure with direct temperature measurements (e.g. Reference BjörnssonBjörnsson and others, 1996; Reference Ødegård, Hagen and HamranØdegård and others, 1997; Reference Pettersson, Jansson and HolmlundPettersson and others, 2003; Reference Gusmeroli, Murray, Jansson, Pettersson, Aschwanden and BoothGusmeroli and others, 2010).
In order to ascertain the cause of the GPR scatters at Kårsaglaciären, we determined the GPR signal velocity at different depths by constructing idealized diffraction hyperbolae of known velocities and fitting them to the hyperbolae present in our GPR data (cf. Reference MooreMoore and others, 1999; Reference Benjumea, Macheret, Navarro and TeixidóBenjumea and others, 2003; Reference DanielsDaniels, 2004; Reference Navarro, Macheret and BenjumeaNavarro and others, 2005; Reference Brandt, Langley, Kohler and HamranBrandt and others, 2007; Reference Murray, Booth and RippinMurray and others, 2007). This fitting of hyperbolae is possible because: (1) the geometry of individual diffraction hyperbolae in common-offset GPR surveys is a function of the velocity of electromagnetic energy; and (2) the GPR wave velocity varies depending on the nature of the material through which the energy travels (Reference Murray, Booth and RippinMurray and others, 2007). We used unmigrated data when fitting hyperbolae, because some of the processing steps that were followed to enable the glacier bed to be seen most clearly remove some of the higher-frequency scatters and because the process of migration collapses hyperbolae to their point source.
Figure 4a–c show unmigrated sections without topographic correction where we identify intense internal scattering. In Figure 4a–c, numerous hyperbolae are indicated by white ellipses. We avoid showing the modelled hyperbolae as they would obscure the measured hyperbolae. The number tied to each ringed hyperbola in Figure 4 represents the velocity of each modelled hyperbola (m ns−1 ). In Figure 5, the hyperbolae identified in our data are plotted for each of the three transects that incorporate the zones of intense scattering (cf. Fig. 4). In each panel, we plot the velocity and depth of measured hyperbolae: the vast majority are associated with the zone of scattering in which we are interested, but a small number are also visible close to the glacier surface and from within other parts of the glacier not dominated by extensive scattering.
Our investigation of the internal GPR scatters within Kårsaglaciären firstly shows that the measured hyperbolae have velocities ranging from 0.130 to 0.220 m ns−1. Secondly, we identify that the hyperbolae velocity is related to their position within the glacier. Typical velocities of material found in glaciers are: for ice, 0.150–0.173 m ns−1; for snow, 0.212–0.245 m ns−1; and for dry sedimentary material, ∼0.150 m ns−1 (after Reference DanielsDaniels, 1996, Reference Daniels2004; Reference Eisen, Nixdorf, Wilhelms and MillerEisen and others, 2002, Reference Eisen, Wilhelms, Steinhage and Schwander2006; Reference Brandt, Langley, Kohler and HamranBrandt and others, 2007). The highest velocities we identify are associated with near-surface hyperbolae and thus are highly likely to be associated with scatters within surface snow. Hyperbolae identified in the middle parts of the glacier have velocities ranging from ∼0.163 to 0.170 m ns−1 and thus we attribute these to typical glacier ice. We also identify velocities in the intense scattering zones ranging from 0.130 to 0.150 m ns−1. We interpret these hyperbolae as indicating the presence of either dry sediments or warmer temperate ice.
Since the GPR velocities that we identify associated with the intense scattering zone of hyperbolae near the glacier snout fit well with those reported in the literature for temperate glacier ice (Reference DanielsDaniels, 1996, Reference Daniels2004; Reference Eisen, Nixdorf, Wilhelms and MillerEisen and others, 2002, Reference Eisen, Wilhelms, Steinhage and Schwander2006; Reference Brandt, Langley, Kohler and HamranBrandt and others, 2007), we are confident that we can interpret these zones of scattering as being indicative of temperate ice, i.e. ice containing water, either with or without englacial sediments. We therefore propose that part of the ablation zone of Kårsaglaciären contains temperate ice and thus that it is presently polythermal.
Discussion
Glacier geometry
Our investigations indicate that Kårsaglaciären is presently slightly less than 2 km in length, covers a surface area of 0.85 km2 and has an altitudinal range of ∼983–1500 m a.s.l. The lower- and uppermost parts are relatively flat, with surface slopes of less than ∼10°, while the central portion is steeper, with surface slopes of ∼25–40° (Fig. 6a). Presently, the glacier has an overall volume of ∼0.0178 km3 and a maximum thickness of ∼56 m. Reference BodinBodin (1993) reported that in 1992 the glacier covered an area of ∼1.2 km2, had a maximum thickness of ∼70 m and a total volume of 0.04 km3. Therefore, over the 17 years between the two studies, the glacier area has shrunk by >29%, the volume by >55% and the thickness by 20% (expressed as a proportion of the 1992 values).
The central steep area coincides with one of three areas of thickest ice running in a linked chain along the central line of the glacier (Fig. 2c). Interestingly, the thick areas are not associated with distinct topographic overdeepenings. Nevertheless, there is a central trough running along the glacier centre and it is clear that ice flow would be focused along this trajectory. This is reinforced by calculations of driving stress (Fig. 6b), which is calculated as:
where τ d is the driving stress (Pa), ρi is the density of ice (917 kg m−3), g is acceleration due to gravity (9.81 ms−2), h is ice thickness and α is the surface slope in degrees (e.g. Reference Van der Veen and WhillansVan der Veen and Whillans, 1989). Figure 6b clearly shows elevated driving stress along the centre of the glacier, coinciding with the area of thickest ice, reaching a clear maximum of ∼295 kPa in the glacier’s centre where surface slopes are also greatest.
Thermal regime
Our interpretation of temperate ice within the ablation area of Kårsaglaciären is a surprise and refutes our hypothesis that a small Arctic glacier will have a cold ablation area. Reference MurrayMurray and others (2000) stated that glaciers less than ∼100 m thick tend to be cold, so we question how temperate ice can exist in this location within Kårsaglaciären. We acknowledge the possibility that (part of) the accumulation area might also be temperate in a similar way to Storglaciären, but we have no data from this region.
Storglaciären is located at 67.9° N, 18.57° E and thus is slightly further south than Kårsaglaciären. It is longer than Kårsaglaciären at 3.12 km as opposed to ∼2 km and is found at a slightly higher altitude of 1130–1750 m a.s.l. compared with 983–1500 m a.s.l. It is also substantially thicker than Kårsaglaciären, attaining a maximum thickness of 250 m. It has a polythermal regime in which ∼85% of the glacier is temperate, with a cold surface layer in the ablation area (Reference Pettersson, Jansson and HolmlundPettersson and others, 2003; Reference Gusmeroli, Murray, Jansson, Pettersson, Aschwanden and BoothGusmeroli and others, 2010). By contrast, Kårsaglaciären’s maximum thickness is just ∼56 m.
At Kårsaglaciären, temperate ice at the snout of an otherwise cold glacier conforms to a type B polythermal glacier as summarized by Reference PetterssonPettersson (2004). However, the structure we envisage here is more complex, involving a much smaller temperate zone in the snout, with a main cold body in the upper to mid-ablation area and the possibility of a temperate area in the accumulation zone. It is important to note that this structure is markedly different from that of Storglaciären, which conforms more closely to a type E polythermal glacier (after Reference PetterssonPettersson, 2004), in which the glacier is largely temperate with only a thin cold surface layer in the ablation zone.
The difference between the thermal structure of Kårsaglaciären and Storglaciären can be explained by considering the mechanisms responsible for producing and modifying that thermal structure. At Storglaciären, melting of surface snow and its percolation into a porous firn aquifer leads to the generation of substantial heat and of new temperate ice when this water refreezes (Reference Pettersson, Jansson, Huwald and BlatterPettersson and others, 2007; Reference Gusmeroli, Murray, Jansson, Pettersson, Aschwanden and BoothGusmeroli and others, 2010). This temperate body is then maintained by the advection of temperate ice throughout the glacier, and the overall ice thickness. While we might assume similar melting takes place in the accumulation area of Kårsaglaciären, it is clear from the largely cold ablation zone that any advected temperate ice cannot be sustained, possibly as a consequence of thin ice and the role of the winter cold wave outlined previously. We must therefore seek another explanation for the small area of temperate ice in the snout. The existence of temperate ice is most often attributed to enhanced strain heating (Reference Blatter and HutterBlatter and Hutter, 1991; Reference PetterssonPettersson, 2004; Reference Benn and EvansBenn and Evans, 2010) and thus to driving stress. Kårsaglaciären presently generates driving stresses up to ∼295 kPa (Fig. 6b). These driving stresses, although high, are limited spatially to the central steep and thick portion of the glacier, and are evidenced by the strain response of brittle failure and thus severe surface crevassing visible here. In the lowermost part of Kårsaglaciären where slopes are shallow (Fig. 6a) and the ice is thin (Fig. 2c), driving stress is low (Fig. 6b). Thus we suggest that strain heating is not a viable mechanism to produce melting and temperate ice formation in the snout of Kårsaglaciären.
The only other widely cited mechanisms for producing temperate ice in this location are via heating due to a geothermal heat flux, meltwater refreezing and heat conduction and advection from the surface (Reference Blatter and HutterBlatter and Hutter, 1991; Reference PetterssonPettersson, 2004; Reference Pettersson, Jansson, Huwald and BlatterPettersson and others, 2007; Reference Benn and EvansBenn and Evans, 2010). If geothermal fluxes were high at Kårsaglaciären then we would expect to see temperate ice over a much wider area, so we discount this mechanism. Temperate ice could be formed within the snout of Kårsaglaciären by meltwater refreezing. There are two small meltwater portals and some crevasses that could act as access points for water to englacial locations. However, we believe that the two portals and these few crevasses are not sufficiently widespread to explain the spatial pattern of scattering within our GPR data. Furthermore, crevasses are most likely to contribute to cooling of ice by facilitating penetration of the winter cold wave to greater depth. So, unlike Storglaciären, the ablation zone of Kårsaglaciären is cold throughout, apart from the small patch in the snout, and this present temperate ice zone within Kårsaglaciären cannot be explained using prevailing hypotheses of the mechanisms of temperate ice formation and of the controls on polythermal glacier structure. Therefore it seems highly unlikely that the ablation area of Kårsaglaciären is actively polythermal, i.e. that its current geometry and thickness are not able to maintain the polythermal structure that we observe.
We therefore propose a conceptual model (Fig. 7) in which the present internal structure of Kårsaglaciären is a remnant of a past thermal state. When Kårsaglaciären was more extensive and thicker (Reference SchyttSchytt, 1959), we believe that it was actively polythermal in the way that Storglaciären currently is (cf. Reference PetterssonPettersson, 2004). However, substantial mass loss in recent decades (e.g. 20% of ice thickness since 1992; Reference BodinBodin, 1993) means that it can no longer actively sustain a polythermal structure in the ablation zone, so the temperate ice found in the lower glacier is a remnant of a previously more extensive temperate core (Fig. 7). In this sense Krsaglaciären might represent a future analogue for Storglaciären-type polythermal glaciers if extensive thinning continues. Under a warming climate, a Storglaciären-type polythermal glacier might thin and although local climatic conditions enable melting and refreezing in a porous accumulation area to continue, thinning of the ablation area to a critical thickness would mean it would begin to turn cold as with Kársaglaciären. This leads us to suggest that in the future the present volume of temperate ice will shrink and cool further, so that ultimately Kársaglaciären may become fully cold.
Significantly, our conceptual model is very different from the changes currently being observed on Storglaciären, where a cold surface layer has thinned in recent years due to an increase in winter temperatures (Reference Pettersson, Jansson, Huwald and BlatterPettersson and others, 2007). While Storglaciären is losing its cold surface layer in the ablation zone and becoming warmer, we propose Kårsaglaciären is losing its zone of temperate ice in the ablation zone and thus becoming colder. This raises the possibility of a complicated evolutionary split, in which some polythermal glaciers may evolve towards a fully temperate thermal ablation zone (Storglaciären-type) while others may evolve towards a fully cold ablation zone (Kårsaglaciärentype), depending on ice thickness. It also suggests that, in time, a Storglaciären-type glacier might subsequently become a Kårsaglaciären-type glacier if it thins sufficiently.
Conclusions
Kårsaglaciären presently has a maximum ice thickness of ∼56 m and covers an area of 0.855 km2. It is representative of most Arctic glaciers; 64.2% of all Arctic glaciers are <2 km2 in area and ∼51% are <1 km2 (http://nsidc.org/data/g01130.html). We have presented the first models of the present-day ice surface and ice thickness and of the subglacial bed topography of Kårsaglaciären. We have also established the contemporary basal conditions and internal structure of Kårsaglaciären and identified a zone of temperate ice near the glacier snout. This zone of temperate ice in an otherwise cold-based glacier demonstrates that Kårsaglaciären is presently polythermal. We suggest that this polythermal regime is not active, i.e. it is a remnant of past glacier geometry and past climate. We propose that as Kårsaglaciären thinned, its warm ‘core’ became unsustainable and decreased in volume. We presume that with time it will lose more volume and eventually disappear. In this way Kårsaglaciären will have transformed from a fully polythermal glacier to a glacier either with a cold thermal regime or a fully cold ablation zone. Our identification of a remnant temperate core indicates that there is a lag in the evolution of the thermal structure of a glacier, causing it to be out of synch with current geometry and climate. It seems probable that many other small Arctic polythermal glaciers could become fully cold (in the ablation zone) due to thinning below some threshold thickness with climate change. Conversely, a thicker polythermal glacier might maintain its temperate ablation zone and evolve towards a fully temperate state, with the possibility that subsequent thinning might force such a glacier along a pathway similar to Kårsaglaciären. If the ablation area of a glacier reaches a fully cold state from a previous polythermal condition, the dynamics and hydrology of that glacier, and ultimately the glacier mass-balance response, will alter. Consequently, some small Arctic glaciers may not sustain present meltwater contributions to sea-level rise. Further work is urgently required to ascertain more fully the thermal structure of small Arctic glaciers, the controls on the thermal regime and the likely evolution of the thermal regime in response to climate change, glacier mass balance and glacier dynamics.
Acknowledgements
D.M. Rippin and J.L. Carrivick are recipients of the 2010 Royal Geographical Society (RGS) Peter Fleming award. J.L. Carrivick was awarded an Access to Abisko Naturvetenskapliga Station (ATANS) grant, a Geographical Fieldwork Grant funded by the Ralph Brown Memorial Trust (administered through the RGS) and a Quaternary Research Association (QRA) research fund grant for this project. The automatic weather station (AWS) was funded by the School of Geography, University of Leeds, and installed with help from L. Brown and D. Hannah. The GPR was borrowed from the Department of Geography, University of Hull, UK. Fieldwork in 2009 and 2010 was financially assisted by the School of Geography, University of Leeds. We thank P. Jansson and P. Holmlund for insightful comments on an early draft of the manuscript and for their thorough support of our work in terms of data and advice; B. Barrett for his insightful comments; D. Carrivick for competent and diligent assistance with fieldwork in 2009 and 2010; C. Plant and C. Mellor for downloading the AWS; and all the ANS staff for their excellent professional help and friendly advice. Finally, we thank A. Gusmeroli, an anonymous referee and the editor J. Woodward for assistance in improving the manuscript.