Introduction
The first glaciological work in Cordillera Blanca was done between 1967 and 1969 on the glacier which flows from Pucahirca (6 OQO m, at the north-east extremity of the Cordillera) towards the north-north-west and which will be called “Glaciar Safuna” (see map, fig. 2, in Reference Lliboutry, Lliboutry, Morales, Pautre and SchneiderLliboutry and others (1977)). Safuna is in fact the name of a lake dammed by old moraines a lit tie down-valley ( Fig.1). When, after 1950, a new lake appeared on the glacier tongue ( Fig.2), the older lake became Laguna Safuna Baja and the new one Laguna Safuna AHa. Both lakes have no visible outlet, and keep their level (4 245 and 4 363 m respectively) through infiltrations (cf. map, Fig. 3). It has been reported in Reference Lliboutry, Lliboutry, Morales, Pautre and SchneiderLliboutry and others (1977) how Safuna Alta emptied after the 1970 earthquake.
The goal of the glaciological work was to ascertain the depth of the rock basement, the internal constitution of the main moraine, and the limits of glacier ice around and below dangerous Laguna Safuna Alta. In order to show how such a problem of applied glaciology was handled, it will be reported chronologically. Nevertheless, in the course of this, another result was obtained: an estimate of the average precipitation in the highest corries of Cordillera Blanca. This datum is essential for any modern hydroelectrical equipment in (his Cordillera. Lastly, the characteristics of the glaciation so found must be kept in mind when studying Holo-cene glacier fluctuations, a broad topic that we can only touch upon briefly here.
Preliminary Study of Safuna, 11-19 JULY 1967
First observations by MM Pautre and Post (of Coyne et Bellier engineering office) and the authors took place in July 1967. To reach the site from the Santa valley, a car journey to Pomabamba and a further journey on horseback are needed.
First the lake was sounded with a plumb line, along a line crossing the lake marked by a nylon cord supported by fishing-net floats. The sounding was done from a small rubber boat and since the lake surface froze each night, we attempted to protect the rubber boat with a wooden bow to convert it into an icebreaker!
Simultaneously water temperatures at different depths were measured with a Telemac vibrating string. The upper layer reached 6°C at sunrise and 10°C in the late afternoon. The lake below was found to be very isothermal, at I I. ±.2°C, with the exception of the deepest layer (0.6°C). The only explanation was that glacier ice underlies the lake.
The springs at the foot of the moraine were at I. I.°C on the right-hand side, denoting lake water, but at 0-3°C on the left side, denoting water which had flowed through ice.
A superficial examination of the moraines showed the existence of a faint inner recent moraine still lying over the glacier on the left side (moraine VI on the map). It may be attributed to the 1920-27 glacier advance, assuming that this advance, recorded elsewhere in Cordillera Blanca (cf. Reference Lliboutry, Lliboutry, Morales, Pautre and SchneiderLliboutry and others, 1977). has been general in the area. Thus the big moraine damming the lake (moraine V on the map) is at least one century old. On the left bank a cliff of ice showed a basal moving moraine (sheared strata of ice and earth) parallel to the steep inner slope of moraine V. Thus this huge moraine is a rather old push moraine, and it was provisionally concluded that it does not enclose any big ice core.
Lastly the glacier tongue was examined. There were at least five moulins. This, and the fact that the mean air temperature of the site is about 5°C, allowed us to assert that the glacier tongue is temperate.
The displacement of eighteen paint marks on boulders during 3 d gave an idea of the velocities: they increase from the front upwards from 5.6 to 77 m per year. If there was no sliding, a thickness increasing from 120 to 230 m could be inferred. On the other hand, since the friction on the bedrock Tb rarely exceeds 1.5 bar, and the glacier slope (tan α) is at least O.10, the glacier thickness h cannot exceed 170 m, according to the approximate classical relation
T b = pgh sin α,
Where pg is the specific weight of ice.
Thus we estimated the glacier thickness to be 150±20 m, and concluded that there should be at the bottom of the lake about 50 ±20 m of ice. These preliminary estimations were sent to Peru in August 1967 (Coyne et Bellier, Géoconseil, unpublished [b]), together with instructions about the geophysical explorations, borings, and surveys to be done.
On 17 October 1968, at 13.30 h, people observed the fall of 200 to 300 m3 of ice from the frontal glacier cliff into the lake, as already observed several times. Nevertheless this time, 10 min after the ice fall, growlers of 50 to 100 m3 began to emerge from the bottom of the lake. This process was seen going on until night. The following morning 150 000 to 200 000 m3 of icebergs, growlers and bergy bits were floating on the lake.
Geophysical Exploration and Borings
From July 1967 to July 1969 one of us (B.S.) remained in the Santa valley to supervise the workings at Safuna and Parón. He made better soundings of the lake with an ultrasonic echo-sounder, Rayion DE 707, sold for fishing purposes. The appearance of the records allows us to distinguish whether the bottom is rock, moraine, or ice. Moreover since its beam is only 15-20° wide, it can be directed horizontally to obtain the profiles of the ice cliffs below water level (Reference SchneiderSchneider, 1969).
Under contract of CPS, Ing. José Arce made several geophysical explorations in December 1967 and 1968 (Arce, unpublished; Coyne et Bellier, Géoconseil, unpublished [a]).
Seismic soundings were made with a line of twelve geophones, 20 m apart, a GT 2 amplifier, and a Polaroid recorder. On the glacier tongue six reflexion profiles, parallel to the glacier bank, were shot. They gave poor reflexions, probably because of a morainic layer with boulders and subglacial cavities. The thickness at the cross-section B ( Fig.4) was everywhere found to be about 180 m.
In the moraine this equipment only allows echoes to be obtained when the reflector is less than 80 m deep. This was the case only on the sides of the valley. The refraction techniques gave P-wave velocities between 1 530 m and 1 900 m/s. Although moraines I and II (damming Safuna Baja) and the lower part of moraine V (damming Safuna Alta) have similar high velocities (1850 cf. i88orn/s), the frequency of the first waves was quite different (40 Hz cf. 106 Hz). According to Arce this indicates that moraines I-II are substantially less compact, and have high P-wave velocities only because they arc extensively water-saturated. This seems to indicate that moraines I-II are ablation moraines never compacted by glacier pushing.
At the foot of push-moraine V and on its external slope, seven electrical d.c. profiles showed:
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a water table 5 to 11 m deep,
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a top layer with a resistivity of 100 Ωm,
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a second layer with a resistivity of 1 000 Ωm, attributed to a buried moraine IV, visible on both sides of moraine V,
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a deep layer with infinite resistivity, thought to be the rock basement. Thus no ice core was identified within the moraine.
Seven borings were made from September 1967 to December 1968 by Jacobs Plücker Brothers. A rotary drill B51 of Boyler Bros Drilling Co Ltd with a triconc head was used.
Two borings were made at the foot of push-moraine V, to 41.8 and 35.7 m respectively. The first one, which lasted two and a half months, was done on the axis of the valley. Under 5.5 m of pervious moraine, a 15 m thick layer of very impervious lacustrine sediments was found, overlying clayish dark moraine without big boulders, with lenses of impervious clay. The lacustrine sediments layer was not found on the right bank.
Two other borings were performed on the crest of push moraine V. Depths of 38.4 and 82.6 m respectively were reached with considerable effort, without finding any ice core: only sand, clay, pebbles, boulders of quartzitic shale up to 1 m thick. The first boring lasted six months. The bore holes were cased down to 23 and 52 m respectively, and then grouted. Up to 60 kg of dry cement per metre of perforation, 2 100 kg of cement in total, were needed!
A fifth boring was made on an ice remnant at the right corner. After several metres of morainic cover, bubbly soft glacier ice, getting hard at the bottom, was found for 10 m. Next the drill emerged into a cavity about I m thick at the ice- moraine interface, which was half infilled with loose debris.
The final boring was done on the glacier tongue itself, at point Pit, in 60 h, almost without interruption. Between depths of 135 and 138 m the drill met a sheared zone with an internal crack 20 cm thick through which the bore hole lost its water. Underneath this the ice was harder and contained small angular debris of shale. Obviously the active glacier is there superimposed on old dead ice and slides on it with the formation of cavities. Drilling had to be interrupted at 155 m because bars twisted.
All this work allows us to sketch with adequate accuracy the cross-sections ( Fig.4). The fact that near the lake only about 138 m out of 180 m of the glacier tongue are active has been checked by an estimation of the difference in the ice discharge at two cross-sections, taking into account the measured balances and assuming a stationary state. We suggest that the big ice emergence of 17 October 1968 came from the lip of the active layer.
Nevertheless we cannot say whether the sheared zone has formed as a fault within a previously homogeneous active glacier, or by the superimposition of an advancing glacier over an old mass of dead ice. We incline towards the later process, which was observed by
Reference Viollet-le-DucViollel-le-Duc (1876) at Glacier des Bossons (French Alps). His sketch, which is reproduced as Figure 5, gives the situation in July 1873. The glacier longue C, which in 1835 almost reached the road to Chamonix on the opposite side of the valley had been receding since then. It had left uncovered a mass of ice A remaining from the 1 770 advance. Both ice masses were separated by a debris layer and, although they were fused together enough to allow a streamlet at the junction, Vioilet-le-Duc concludes from the morphology that the old ice mass was not dragged down consistently by the superimposed glacier tongue.
Movements of the Push Moraine V
An accurate plotting of the aerial coverages of 1950, 1963 and 1968 has been done by SAN (Servicio Aerofotogrâfico Nacional). It allows us to assert that the big push moraine V has significantly moved between these dates. The displacement of five big boulders emerging at the crest of the moraine arc given on the map ( Fig.3). The accuracy is about 1 m for the horizontal positions and 0.5 m for the vertical ones.
Twenty-four stakes put on the crest of moraine V were surveyed five times in 1968 from two points on firm rock, on the two sides of the valley, 1 400 m apart. The disposition optimized the accuracy, but it is known that near a mountain glacier horizontal deviations of the lines of sight up to 0.005 grades may occur (Reference ReynaudReynaud, 1975). Thus the accuracy of the position of the stakes should be ±5 cm. Nevertheless the displacements were significant.
Between 1950 and 1963, the front moraine moved forward by 3 to 8 m. Between 1963 and 1968, it moved by a similar amount, with the exception of the right (northern) corner, which moved towards the lake, up-valley. Similar velocities (0,2 to 0.4 m/year) were found in 1968. Where the push moraine is in contact with the glacier, it moves outwards, radially. Where it is in contact with the lake, it moves in the opposite direction, towards the lake.
As shown by Table I, the settling of the crest has, on average, increased with time, and most of it happens during the rainy season. Lei us recall that the 1970 earthquake settled the moraine by 1.0 m (Reference Lliboutry, Lliboutry, Morales, Pautre and SchneiderLliboulry and others, 1977).
Glacier Velocities and Balances
The lowering of the surface of the glacier tongue at six points of fixed geographical coordinates for 1950-63 and 1963-68 are given on Figure 3. At 1 250 m and at 1 000 m from the crest of frontal moraine V the average lowering rate has been 0.8 m/year for both intervals of time. At 830 m from the crest it has been 0.8 m/year during the first, 2.7 m/year during the second.
Ten ablation stakes were surveyed four times in 1968 (Reference AmesAmes, 1969). The interval of time between the first and the last survey was 242 d. Position ?Γstakes is given on Figure 3 and the measured horizontal velocities on Table II.
The seasonal fluctuations of velocity are erratic. On average they do not increase when the rainy season begins.
The discharge of ice may be calculated through cross-section G5-G6-G7 which is 400 m wide, 180 m deep. The axial velocity there is u0 — 70.9 m/year and the surface slope tan α = 1/5.5. With the notation of Reference LliboutryLliboutry (1977), V = 32.0 m/year, W = 200/180, eve (W) =0.802 and ave (W) =0.533. With the assumptions of Reference LliboutryLliboutry (1977), the average sliding velocity at this cross-section is 45.3 m/year and the discharge of ice 3.56 × 106 m3/year.
Measured balances are given in Table III. A surprising fact is that they are more negative during the rainy season, although there is less insolation. The reader must keep in mind that the seasonal fluctuations of air temperature are quite small in Peru, and thus in the ablation area rain is more frequent than snow. Now it is well known that ablation is very high during warm rain: to the sensible heat of rain must be added the latent heat of moist air dragged vertically by the drops.
The annual balance at 4 400 m was found to be —17 m of ice (fifteen times more than on Hatunraju debris-covered glacier at the same altitude). As shown in Figure 6 its variation with altitude (the “activity coefficient") is very strong: 3.9 m of ice per 100 m of altitude. The equilibrium line is found at about 4 850 m a.s.l. It should be the altitude where snowfalls turn into rain. This value is checked by the fact that in the same valley Nevado Pilanco has a glacier with a gentle slope facing west between 5 080 and 4 700 m. At the same latitude in Cordillera Negra, Cerro Rocarre (5 187 m) has no glaciers, and east of Rio Maranon, Nevado Acrotambo (4850 m) is glacierized (Reference KinzlKinzl, 1942).
The SAN map at 1: 25 000 and the correlation of the balance with altitude have been found to lead to a total annual balance between the cross-section at G7 and the equilibrium line of —6.0 × 106 m3 of ice per year. The lowering of the surface, about 0.8 m over 0.2 km2 gives only a corrective term. Since the discharge of ice at cross-section G7 equals 3.56 × 106 m3 year, it follows that the total annual balance of the accumulation area must be about 9.4 × to6 m3 of ice per year.
The area of the accumulation zone being 3.62 km2, the average balance over it must be about 2.60 m of ice-equivalent (2.30 m of water equivalent) per year. This value seems consistent with the discharge of springs at the foot of moraine V, which has been monitored during two years: its mean value is about 370 1/s, for a basin of 4.6 km2, giving a mean value of (precipitation plus condensation balance) equal to 2.54 m of water per year.
The ablation zone (not including the bottom of Laguna Safuna Alta) totals about 0.84 km3, and the average balance over it is about —it m of ice per year. A correction must be made to take into account the calving into the lake, which was not estimated.
Precipitation and Air Temperature in Cordillera Blanca
The amount of water collected in the basin of Glaciar Safuna, 2.5 m/year on average, may be compared to the 1.30 m of precipitation measured in 1968 at the new small meteorological station of Safuna (4 350 m), although 1968 was a rather dry year. The Safuna accumulation zone is a cirque limited by a ridge oscillating between 5 560 and 6 020 m. Precipitation increases very much with altitude in Cordillera Rlanca. Moreover the summits collect a great amount of rime, which gives them the peculiar aspect called feathered snow by alpinists (Fig- 7)·
The difference from other pluviométrie stations in the basin of Rio Santa is still more striking. Corporacion Peruana del Santa (now Electroperu) operates a score of stations, the locations of which are given in Figure 8. The average annual precipitations during the fifteen years 1953-67 arc given in Table IV, and plotted against altitude in Figure 9. Safuna is much wetter than all the other locations, showing the influence of wet north-easterly winds blowing over 5 000 m.
Nevertheless all rain does not come from the north-east. During the rainy season, clouds at 4 300-5 000 in coming from the south-west enter into the quebradas and cause rain most afternoons. This is the local up-valley wind cammonly found in mountainous areas. We suggest that the same kind of local wind causes the rain at Ticapampa to be a maximum, when compared to other stations on Rio Santa.
The stations in the upper Santa valley (No. 1 to 5) have their precipitations well correlated together (empirical cross-correlation coefficients: 0.711 to 0.928). For the stations No. 6 to II, on a transverse line, the cross-correlations are poorer (0.597 to 0.818). Stations No. 4 and 8 are the most representative of these two groups, and alone are considered in Table V. It shows that the fluctuations of the annual precipitation at the two stations within Cordillera Blanca (Paron and Llanganuco) show almost no correlation with the fluctuations in the Santa valley. Their mutual correlation also is rather insignificant.
Thus Cordillera Blanca and the Santa valley offer a fair diversity of mesoclimates. This can be noticed also by considering the histograms of monthly precipitations in Figure 10. We have classified them into two groups, according to whether there is a sharp maximum in March, or a broad one from January to March or April. Dry sites and wet ones, locations in the Cordillera and in the Santa valley, fall in each group in a random way.
The air temperature should vary more regularly than rain from one site to another, and thus the data from Huaraz (Fig. to) are typical of the whole area, taking into account a temperature gradient of 0.73 deg/100 m. The seasonal fluctuations of maximum temperatures is insignificant. The minimum temperatures arc higher during the rainy season than during the dry one; in March their range is only about 5 deg. Thus the snow turns into rain at almost the same altitude all the year round.
This fact and the high value of the activity coefficient makes the glaciers of Cordillera Blanca much more sensitive to secular variations in temperature than to secular variations in precipitation. Thus old glacier advances can he related to a lowering of the mean air temperature over equatorial regions rather than to a shift of the path of atmospheric perturbations (as in semi-arid Chile for instance). Old glaciations in Peru, if they were accurately dated, would provide a straightforward and crucial test for theories about the origin of ice ages.
Glacial Geology of Cordillera Blanca
Let us sketch briefly the geological facts concerning the upper Cenozoic and Pleistocene (Reference AubouinAubouin and others, 1973; Lliboutry and others, unpublished).
The granodiorite batholith of Cordillera Blanca was formed about seven million years ago. During the Pliocene, intensive volcanism formed Cordillera Negra, and both Cordilleras began uplifting at a rate not less than 2 000 m per million years. This upheaval is still going on at the scale of one thousand years. Callejón de Huaylas uplifted too, by about 3 000 m in total, but at a lesser rate, and thus acquired its actual aspect of being a graben.
There were many catastrophic events. At Huaraz, Tertiary lavas are overlain by volcanic breccias, and next by nine successive layers of heterometric deiritic material consolidated by salts. Nevertheless more to the north erosion by Rio Santa was preponderant. At Malpaso (just north of Carhuás), within a fluvial terrace cut by Rio Buin an old moraine of the Pleistocene can be seen, which lies directly on the Chimú formation (sandstones and quartzites of the Jurassic-Cretaceous boundary).
Owing to the continuous uplift of Cordillera Blanca, the last great glaciation of the Pleistocene was the largest one. Glaciers flowed down to the Callejón de Huaylas and blocked the valley at several places, with the formation of kame terraces. Such was the case for instance at Malpaso (2 650 m): the glacier tongue probably did not come from Quebrada de Ulta 1 whence Rio Buin flows), but from Quebrada Hualcán further up-valley, which is shorter. At Huaraz a very old moraine is found at 3 100 m (denoted m, on the map, Fig.11).
The more accessible moraines, already pointed out by Reference KinzlKinzl (1942), are found above Huaraz, on the way to Laguna Llaca. They were incidentally studied by Michel Vallon in the aforementioned unpublished report, lie distinguishes two neat moraines m, and m3, formed by narrow glacier tongues which were deviated to the right (m3 more than m2) and a smooth morainic arc which ends at about 3 400 m, 9 km from Laguna Llaca. He thinks that m4 was younger than m2 and m3, but we think the reverse. There should be, after the formation of m4, an important upheaval of Cordillera Blanca, allowing fluvial erosion. 'The small valley so created, which bends towards the right, canalized the subsequent glacier advances.
We cross next the great Cordillera Blanca Fault and enter into Quebrada Llaca. At this point, at about 3 900 m and 6 km from Laguna Llaca there is a single outer morainic arc m-5, and several faint inner ridges denoted m6. The whole has been cross-cut by the almost. vertical fault, denoting a vertical relative uplift of about 10 m. Assuming that the difference of uplift rates between the batholith and Callejón de Huaylas has been 1.5 to 2 m per thousand years, this morainic system should be 5 000 to 7 000 years old.
Lastly there are two young morainic arcs 1.2 km apart: m7 at 4 300 m and m8 around Laguna Llaca, the level of which is 4 460 m.
At Safuna we have described the two old moraines I and II around Safuna Baja, moraine III crossing this lake, half-buried moraine IV, the big push moraine V (obviously formed during the last Little Ice Age), and small moraine VI of the twentieth century advance. At least two older moraines can be seen down-valley: one at Huilcapampa (3 970 m) which extends towards Safuna on the right side of the valley, and another one forming a terrace at great height on the left side ( Fig.1). The front of this last one must lie somewhere much further down-valley.
On the west side of Pucahirca, at the bottom of Tayapampa, there exist two lakes, Pucacocha and Laguna Kaico, which correspond exactly to Safuna Alta and Safuna Baja. Laguna Kaico is also crossed by a moraine III.
In other places the moraines can be quite different. As said in Reference LliboutryLliboutry (1977), big Hatunraju moraine in front of Laguna Parón should result from the superimposition of all the moraines, I to VI, which are separated at Safuna. On the southern side of Uraushraju (south-east from Huaraz, see location on Fig. 8) there is a young moraine close to the glacier and next four morainic arcs on a flat area at 4 000 m distant respectively 6, 9, 10 and 12 km from the glacier.
We shall end these indications for future research workers by suggesting a correlation between the morainic systems at Huaraz and Safuna, and a chronology which makes them much older than assumed by Reference ClappertonClapperton (1972) (Table VI).
Acknowledgments
All this work in Peru could not have been done without the effective support of many engineers and technicians of Gorporacion Peruana del Santa (now Electroperú, Section V). Let us thank specially its technical Director Ing. Del Carpio, Ing. Galvez who organized the topographical work and Ing. Rossell who recollected the meteorological data. Thanks are given to its director, who in 1970 allowed the publication of the results. We have already quoted the distinguished work done by Servicio Aerofotografico Nacional, by Ing. J. Arce, and by the chief of the diving department of the Navy at Callao, First Lieutenant Jeanneau.