Hubbard Glacier (60°00′ N, 139°29′ W), with an area of 3400 km2, is the largest non-polar tidewater glacier in the world. It descends over 120 km from its origins on the flanks of Mount Logan (5959 m a.s.l.) in Yukon, Canada, to sea level where its 11 km wide terminus calves icebergs into Disenchantment Bay and Russell Fiord in southeast Alaska, USA. With a total area ratio of 95%, Hubbard Glacier is in the advance phase of the so-called tidewater glacier cycle (Reference Trabant, Krimmel, Echelmeyer, Zirnheld and ElsbergTrabant and others, 2003), advancing 620 m from 1992 to 2006 at an average rate of 35 m a−1 (Reference Ritchie, Lingle, Motyka and TrufferRitchie and others, 2008). Hubbard Glacier has twice closed off Russell Fiord at its seaward entrance (Fig. 1), creating a 60 km long glacier-dammed lake, once in 1986 and again in 2002. Both dams failed catastrophically, releasing two of the world’s largest historic outburst floods (5 and 3 km3 respectively) (Reference Motyka and TrufferMotyka and Truffer, 2007). High calving rates coupled with submarine melting driven by the combination of tidal currents (∼5 m s−1), warm sea water (5–11°C) and a deep channel have thus far inhibited another closure. However, rapid deposition of ∼3.3 × 106 m3 of glaciofluvial sediment near Gilbert Point during August 2007 has led us to examine whether a new closure may be in the making. Such a closure is of concern to local inhabitants because sustained damming of Russell Fiord will cause the lake to backflow into the Situk River, dramatically changing the landscape, creating floods, destroying fish habitats, and threatening structures. Past closures were facilitated by the terminus pushing glaciomarine sediments above tidewater at Gilbert Point during its springtime seasonal advance. The moraine limited calving losses, which allowed the glacier to advance rapidly across the narrow channel that typically separates Gilbert Point and the ice face.
Hubbard Glacier ordinarily undergoes a 200–300 m seasonal advance-and-retreat cycle, with retreat typically beginning in mid-June (Reference Ritchie, Lingle, Motyka and TrufferRitchie and others, 2008). Daily range data acquired in 2007 by the US Army Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory (CRREL) from a laser ranger positioned across from the ice face at Gilbert Point (Reference Finnegan, Lawson, Hanlon and KalliFinnegan and others 2007; Fig. 2) document that the terminus approached to within 120 m of the point before abruptly retreating after 14 June 2007 (http://www.GlacierResearch.org). It was therefore surprising when observers from the nearby community of Yakutat reported that a new moraine had developed in mid-August, a time when the terminus was in seasonal retreat. However, an aerial photograph taken on 11 August clearly shows that the likely source of the sediment was not a push moraine but instead a large subglacial outlet stream (Fig. 1). A time-lapse camera located at the CRREL Gilbert Point site across from the terminus captured the earliest indication of this ice-marginal glaciofluvial moraine on 10 August 2007. The time-lapse sequence, synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images and oblique aerial photographs documented the development of an ice spur and glaciofluvial moraine near Gilbert Point during mid-August. An oblique aerial photograph taken about noon on 26 August at high tide shows the fully developed glaciofluvial fan (Fig. 3). The exposed area of the sediment fan measured about 400 m by 250 m, with a narrow ice spur connecting it to the main terminus. Both features were still in place when photographed on 31 August, but the fan had not grown and in fact appeared to have diminished in size. SAR and time-lapse images show the deposit gradually shrinking during early September, probably as a result of erosion by tidal currents. Sediments were no longer visible by 15 September, and the ice spur itself disintegrated and was completely gone on or about 19 September.
We conducted a bathymetric survey on 22 October 2007, to assess the volume and extent of the August sedimentation event (Fig. 2). We compared this survey with a US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) survey of Disenchantment Bay conducted on 7 September 2006. The NOAA survey was limited to the area west of Gilbert Point because of unsafe conditions within the gap. A ‘sill’ just west of Gilbert Point is visible in Figure 2 and in all bathymetric surveys since the 2002 outburst flood (Reference Motyka and TrufferMotyka and Truffer, 2007). The mid-June 2007 terminus position slightly overrides this sill (Fig. 2). It was at this location that the sub-glacial stream discharged and deposited sediments that became exposed in August.
Figure 4 shows an isopach map derived by comparing the 2007 and 2006 bathymetry, with seabed changes relative to the 2006 survey. The isopach map is best defined for the regions where both surveys had good data coverage, which luckily is the center of the map, directly over the sill. The glaciofluvial fan-deposit and terminus positions from 25 August are superimposed onto the map to show their relationship to where submarine sediment accumulated. Interestingly, most of the accumulation occurred on the west side of the sill and is >30 m thick in places. This sediment load is perched on the sill over a steep westerly drop-off (cf. Fig. 2). Sediment also accumulated directly on the sill, and some sediment has filled in parts of the channel between Gilbert Point and the terminus. However, the bathymetric data suggest that other parts of the channel have been scoured and deepened. The glacier may have eroded sediments in the gap entrance during its spring advance (Fig. 4). The 14 June terminus position falls directly over the scoured area east of the sill. In addition, the increase in channel floor height just south of this position could reflect sediment shoved forward by ice advance. High tidal currents in the restriction probably eroded the channel to the south of the sill.
From analysis of the isopach map, SAR images and aerial photographs, we estimate the total volume of sediment deposited by the subglacial stream was ∼3.3 × 106 m3, some of which has been subsequently eroded. If we assume that the deposition occurred over a 3 week period (roughly correlating with our imagery), then sediment flux from this stream averaged ∼0.16 × 106 m3 d−1. This estimate is a minimum because not all sediment was deposited locally. As a comparison, the total terminus-wide glaciofluvial sediment flux for three tidewater glaciers in Glacier Bay, Alaska, was reported to range from ∼0.02 to 0.20 × 106 m3 d−1 (Reference Hunter, Powell and LawsonHunter and others, 1996). It is interesting that the localized rapid sedimentation at Gilbert Point did not lead to a closure this past summer. The probable reason is that the summer retreat was already well underway before the subglacial stream appeared and the sediments began accumulating. In addition, the deposit was of limited extent, so calving continued on either side of the ice spur, thereby exposing the spur and apron to increased erosion and wastage by tidal currents. Currents were probably stronger than normal given the seasonally narrowed channel. What is perplexing is why a subglacial stream would discharge over the sill, rather than on either side of it where water was deeper.
What does this accumulation of sediment at Gilbert Point bode for spring 2008? It is difficult to say. The main channel remains relatively deep. The last closure occurred because morainal material was pushed up and onto the sill from the northeast as well as towards Gilbert Point (Reference Motyka and TrufferMotyka and Truffer, 2007). However, if the terminus advances as far as it did in June 2007, then it will likely reactivate any debris remaining on top and surrounding the sill. Some of it may be pushed and ‘spill over’ into the deep water to the east (Fig. 2), but sediment may also be pushed south into the channel. This would lead to a closure if erosion by tidal currents could not keep up with the sediment flux. Reference Motyka and TrufferMotyka and Truffer (2007) suggested another closure would occur by 2012. However, with the added glaciofluvial sediment from 2007, closure may happen much sooner, perhaps this spring.
Acknowledgement
The manuscript was improved by comments from M. Funk and J. Walder.
1 April 2008