Introduction
Small “moat lakes”, sometimes empty, sometimes filled with water, are encountered on the edges of glacial firn areas of the Juneau Icefield in south-eastern Alaska. Earlier explanations for such minor marginal lakes are that they may develop alongside nunataks owing to reflected heat from the rock (e.g. Reference Embleton and KingEmbleton and King, 1968, p. 424).
In the summer of 1971 I was afforded the opportunity of making observations on two marginal lakes on the Juneau Icefield: (1) Lake Linda at the uppermost end of Lemon Creek Glacier (lat. 58° 21′ N., long. 134° 22′ W.; approximately 1 200 m a.s.l.), and (2) Salla Lake at Icy Basin, a cirque on the margin of Taku Glacier about 27 km above its terminus (lat. 58° 39′ N., long. 134° 11′ W.; approximately 1 150 m a.s.l.) (Fig. 1) and, in addition, a number of other lakes by means of air photographic interpretation
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Exposure, Form and Size of the Lakes
Lake Linda is situated between the Lemon Creek Glacier firn area and the moraine which forms the end wall of the glacier. Even on the rock-wall side, the oval-shaped lake basin is bordered for the most part by snow and ice (Fig. 2). It runs in a south-east to north-west direction, approximately that of the prevailing wind. The basin is about 300 m long, about 60 m broad at its widest point and about 25 m deep (Fig. 2). The slopes bordering the basin are steep; in some cases the slope was as much as 60°. In July 1971, only an area measuring a little more than 100 m in length in the bottom of the basin was filled with water (Fig. 3). Because of the ice divide to the north of Lake Linda, the glacier flows slowly towards the lake basin even though the main flow of the glacier is in the opposite direction (Fig. 2).
Salla Lake lies between the rock bank which rises steeply towards the northern edge of Ice Basin and the glacier (Fig. 7). The cliff side of Salla Lake is bounded in the centre by ice and at either end by rock. The southern edge is completely ice bound. The lake is elongated in form and the direction of its longitudinal axis is 030°–210°. The eastern end of the lake is broader than the western end. The lake basin is about 550 m long, has a maximum width of about 120 m and is about 12 m deep (Fig. 4). The slope bordering the lake is gentler than those of Lake Linda. The maximum inclination of the slopes is about 45°. The declivity of the surface of Icy Basin and crevasses in the ice indicate that the glacier flows from south, east and west towards the lake basin and tries to fill it (Fig. 5). In the bottom of the lake there can be found old blue ice composed of large crystals (5–10 cm in diameter). In July and August 1971, there was no longer any water in the lake.
Formation and Development of the Lakes
The formation of glaciers and the positions they occupy in mountainous tracts are largely dependent not only on the topography but also on the direction of the winds that bring snow to the area. On the Juneau Icefield strong winds blow from the southern sector, principally from the south-east, and cause drifting (Reference MillerMiller, 1967, p. 208). This can be seen from the accumulation forms of the snow on the field and also from air photographs. Consequently, more snow tends to accumulate on the northern sides of the nunataks than on the southern sides, which face the wind. If the nunatak is in the form of a ridge following the direction of the wind, then a wind channel is formed on one or both sides. The snow does not pile up in such a channel to the same degree that it does elsewhere. This has happened in the case of Lake Linda.
If there is a steep wall of rock at right-angles to the direction of the wind, this causes eddying currents of wind to be formed which blow upwards, downwards or to the sides. They prevent in part the snow from piling up (Fig. 6). Such has been the case with Salla Lake. In the winter of 1970–71 the snow that had accumulated in the bottom of the lake was between 1 and 3 m thick judging from the melted snow that remained (Fig. 7). The thickness of the corresponding layer of snow on the even surface of nearby Taku Glacier was about 5 m.
The lake basin continues to develop in such a way that melt water from the surface of the glacier and the slopes of the nunatak collects in the depression originally made by the wind. Such a pond enlarges its basin by melting the walls and floor by the heat of the water (cf. Reference MaagMaag, 1969), which is carried to the periphery and the bottom by convection currents (cf. Reference SharpSharp, 1947, p. 44). Melting lumps of ice and snow which have risen from the bottom or fallen from the sides of the lake float in the water.
Melt water flowing down from the slopes of the nunatak carries with it considerable quantities of sediment, which make the water muddy and at the same time dirty the floor of the lake and the ice and snow floating in the water. The lake may be emptied of water, sometimes catastrophically rapidly (Reference AsherAsher, 1971), as in the case of many ice-dammed lakes of other types (cf. Reference GlenGlen, 1954; Reference AitkenheadAitkenhead, 1960; Reference MarcusMarcus, 1960; Reference LindsayLindsay, 1966), when the ice floats to the surface and allows the water to drain out by way of a crevasse or tunnel in the bottom of the lake. A distinct dirty area is then left on the sides of the lake basin showing the extent of the water. Lumps of floating ice are deposited on the floor of the basin and, together with rocks which have rolled into the lake, form a chaotic topography (Fig. 7).
Because of the sediments, the albedo decreases and ablation increases to such a degree that nearly all of the snow which has piled up in the winter melts in the course of the summer and drains away as water through the bottom of the basin. The running water also helps to melt the ice in the bottom of the basin. There is a considerable difference in the albedo and ablation values for clean and dirty snow. This is clearly shown in the blocks of snow which have been floating in the water. These assume a mushroom-like shape of which the top consists of clean snow, while the foot is formed of the snow which has been under the water and has consequently melted much more quickly (Fig. 7).
The amount of heat reflected from the slopes of the nunatak is so small as not to be of any real significance as an ablation agent for the snow and ice lying in the lower parts of the lake basin. This is clearly seen from the position of Lake Linda (Figs. 2 and 3), situated as it is at the foot of a slope facing north. As far as Salla Lake is concerned, the slope does in fact face more or less south but in spite of that on the cliff side the lake is bounded by ice and snow in the centre. On the rock slope and the ice there was still white snow right down to the very edge of the water as late as the beginning of August 1971 (Figs. 4 and 7). Farther up the slope the snow had melted.
The following winter, snow piles up on the uneven surface of the bottom of the lake, but not in any great quantities. The snow accumulates for the most part in calm weather, even though drift snow blowing across the bed of the lake may collect to some degree because of the unevenness of the ground. However, for the most part the wind carries the snow to the edges of the basins. In any case the depression still exists the following spring; possibly its drainage tunnel has frozen solid in the course of the winter and so the basin can once more fill with water. The process then continues in the same way as during the preceding summer.
Conclusions
To confirm this theory of the origin of small marginal lakes, which is based principally on morphological and exposure factors, individual observations on the accumulation of snow, on ablation and microclimatic conditions in the lake basins should be carried out in the future. There are, in any case, a number of factors which provide evidence to the effect that too much importance has been hitherto attached to the influence exerted by heat reflected from nunataks.
Acknowledgements
I am profoundly grateful to Professor Maynard M. Miller for giving me the chance of attending the 12th Summer Institute of Glaciological and Arctic Sciences, Juneau Icefield, Alaska, and also for many stimulating discussions as to the origin of moat lakes. To Mr Robert Asher I extend my thanks for his guidance in helping me to learn about Lake Linda. Mr Christopher Grapes kindly translated the manuscript into English.
This journey was made possible as a result of grants received from the National Science Foundation, U.S.A., the Leo and Regina Wainstein Foundation, Finland, and the National Research Council for Natural Sciences, Finland. To all of these institutions I wish to extend my best thanks.