1. Introduction
In 2005, a shallow firn core was drilled on the summit of Monte San Valentín (46°35′ S, 73°19′ W; 3747 m a.s.l.), Northern Patagonia Icefield (NPI), to evaluate the potential of the site for future paleoclimate investigations. Chemical and radionuclide measurements led to the reconstruction of an annual net accumulation of 20 cm w.e. over the past 45 years (Reference VimeuxVimeux and others, 2008). This is a much smaller value than expected from previous work, namely: (1) other published data arising from firn-core studies for both the NPI and Southern Patagonia Icefield (SPI), ranging from ∼1 to 14 m w.e. a−1 (Reference YamadaYamada, 1987; Reference Aristarain and DelmasAristarain and Delmas, 1993; Reference Rott, Stuefer, Siegel, Skvarca and EckstallerRott and others, 1998; Reference Matsuoka and NaruseMatsuoka and Naruse, 1999; Reference Popovnin, Danilova and PetrakovPopovnin and others, 1999; Reference ShiraiwaShiraiwa and others, 2002; Reference Schwikowski, Brütsch, Casassa and RiveraSchwikowski and others, 2006) and (2) annual precipitation estimates in the NPI area of 3–10 m w.e. according to isolated meteorological observations (Reference Fujiyoshi, Kondo, Inoue and YamadaFujiyoshi and others, 1987), hydrological models (Reference Escobar, Vidal, Garín, Naruse, Naruse and AniyaEscobar and others, 1992) and European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) Interim Re-analyses (ERA-I) including the San Valentín summit (available from ECMWF at 0.5° and over the 2000–07 period; Reference BerrisfordBerrisford and others, 2009).
Net accumulation is total accumulation (precipitation and blowing-snow redeposition) minus ablation (wind erosion, melting or sublimation). Two hypotheses have been suggested to explain such low accumulation at the site:
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1. Strong wind erosion may cause low accumulation, although no alteration of isotopic or chemical signals is observed (Reference VimeuxVimeux and others, 2008). According to US National Centers for Environmental Prediction (NCEP)/ US National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) reanalyses (Reference KalnayKalnay and others, 1996) at 600 mbar (roughly corresponding to the glacier altitude), annual mean wind speed over the 1948–2005 period is 15 m s−1 on the NPI and can attain >20 m s−1 from December to April in extreme events. However, this value is of the same order as wind-speed reanalyses, and in situ measurements on the SPI for which high accumulation is found (Reference ShiraiwaShiraiwa and others (2002) found similar wind-speed values on Glaciar Tyndall, SPI, where an annual accumulation of ∼2 m w.e. has been estimated).
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2. Low accumulation may result from a low precipitation rate due to the combined effect of altitude (NPI elevation is 1000–1500 m and San Valentín is the highest summit, 1000–2000 m higher than other drilling sites) and the mountain range acting as a barrier (annual precipitation decreases from ∼7000 mm on the Chilean coast to <200 mm east of the Argentine Andes, with a significant spatial gradient on the icefield (Reference Carrasco, Casassa, Rivera, Casassa, Supúlveda and SinclairCarrasco and others, 2002; Reference Schneider, Glaser, Kilian, Santana, Butorovic and CasassaSchneider and others, 2003; Reference VillalbaVillalba and others, 2003). The estimated precipitation decrease from west to east across the SPI is 20–50% according to Reference Escobar, Vidal, Garín, Naruse, Naruse and AniyaEscobar and others (1992) and Reference Carrasco, Casassa, Rivera, Casassa, Supúlveda and SinclairCarrasco and others (2002). Furthermore, the San Valentín is located at the northeast corner of the icefield, ∼30 km east of the first orographic obstacles encountered by Pacific air masses). Both orographic features are expected to strongly reduce the precipitation rate and the cloud development at the altitude of Monte San Valentín. However, as there is no meteorological station at this altitude in Patagonia, we have no information on precipitation rate.
Although this second hypothesis could appear unlikely in view of the expected annual precipitation and observed wind speeds, we started to consider it seriously following discussions with LAN Airlines pilots while preparing the 2007 field campaign (personal communication from B. Pouyaud and G. Casassa, 2006). Around ten daily flights cross the NPI at >10 000 m a.s.l. and it is often observed that only the San Valentín summit is visible above a regional cloud cover extending both west and east on the lower icefields.
In this paper, we test the hypothesis that precipitation rate on the San Valentín summit is low relative to surrounding regions. We base our estimates of daily cloudiness on satellite images derived from Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) data from 2000 to 2008.
2. Data and Methodology
2.1. Data
The San Valentín summit is a plateau with an east–west extension of 1.5 km spanning an altitude range of 3700– 4030 m. The need for daily, high (or at least medium) spatial resolution observations of this glacier and its surroundings led us to select the MODIS satellite sensor. This provides daily reflectances in seven channels for land surface applications (Reference Vermote, El Saleous and JusticeVermote and others, 2002) at a spatial resolution of 250 or 500 m, depending on the channel. These are surface reflectances, corrected from atmospheric effects (absorption and diffusion by gases and aerosols). There are currently two operating MODIS sensors, one on board the Terra satellite in orbit since December 1999 and the second on board the Aqua satellite since May 2002. The MODIS reflectances are gridded on a sinusoidal projection, divided into 10° × 10° tiles. Daily files can be downloaded through the Land Processes Distributed Active Archive Center (LP DAAC) web page (https://lpdaac.usgs.gov/lpdaac/get_data). Channel 1 (620–670 nm) and channel 2 (841–876 nm) data are available at a 250 m spatial resolution in the MODG09Q products for Terra (MYDG09Q for Aqua), and the other channels are available at a 500 m spatial resolution in the MODG09GA products for Terra (MYDG09A for Aqua), along with a Cloud Mask included in the 1 km Quality Assurance field. The geographical coordinates of the San Valentín summit correspond to the h12v13 MODIS tile.
We examined other available products. Thermal observations of MODIS at night have a 5 km spatial resolution, so cannot be used to study the Monte San Valentín cloudiness. Similarly, the meteorological satellites GOES-East (Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites) are not useful for this study because of a spatial resolution problem. The finest resolution of 1 km is only available for the visible channel for nadir viewing. The resolution becomes coarser as one goes south, to the edges of the satellite image, and San Valentín is clearly located near the south edge
2.2. Methodology
2.2.1. False-color composite images
We first define an area of interest around the San Valentín summit, adding a width of 94 km north-northeast to south-southwest, and a larger width of 141 km north-northwest to south-southeast (total area >14 000 km2). We divide this area in two along the Andean ridge, defining a southwest (SW) zone containing the Pacific Coast and a northeast (NE) zone separated from the Pacific Ocean by the mountain range (cyan line in Fig. 1). Our aim is to clearly separate the Chilean coast (windward) from the Argentine side (leeward). As our objective is to evaluate the difference in cloudiness between the San Valentín and surrounding regions at lower altitude, we also define the San Valentín (SV) zone according to its GPS coordinates (small white parallelogram in Fig. 1).
To study the cloudiness of this area, we create false-color composite images using the 250 m spatial resolution channels 1 and 2 in association with the 500 m spatial resolution channel 6 (1628–1652 nm, in the shortwave infrared (SWIR) band), projected respectively in the red, green and blue color channels of the display device (Table 1). Figure 1 shows such an image for different cloud covers. Water surfaces appear in black, clear land surfaces in green, snow and ice in light yellow (due to the use of channel 6, which can differentiate between snow/ice and liquid water clouds because in the SWIR band most liquid water clouds have a high reflectance while ice and snow have a low reflectance (Reference Salomonson and AppelSalomonson and Appel, 2004)) and liquid water clouds in white.
2.2.2. The Eye Index (EI)
To explore the daily cloudiness from 2000 to 2008 (3074 images), we define an index representing the cloudiness. The need to compare the cloudiness over the SV zone with the SW and NE zones using the same index prevents us from using a classical algorithm for cloud detection (section 2.3). We thus proceed to a visual evaluation of cloudiness for each MODIS image, where a human eye observes daily false-color composite images of the total area. The observer assigns for each zone (SV, SW and NE), and for each daily image, one of three levels called the ‘Eye Index’ (EI): clear (EI = 0), cloudy (EI = 1) or ‘mixed’ (EI = 0.5). Examples of different situations are shown in Figure 1c–e. An EI of 0 is assigned when the considered zone is entirely clear or when iced clouds are detected (section 2.4). An EI of 1 is assigned when the considered zone is entirely cloudy. For the other cases, an EI of 0.5 is assigned. There are two exceptions: when a very small accumulation of clouds in a corner of the image is exhibited or when we detect a very small cloud, we attribute an EI of 0. In contrast, when almost all the considered region is cloudy, we attribute an EI of 1.
We thus obtain a daily reconstruction of cloudiness from 2000 to 2008. The validity of our basic method is discussed next.
2.3. Validation of EI
To validate the EI method, we propose four independent validations.
2.3.1. The Cloud Index (CI)
We have created for both the SW and NE zones a very simple Cloud Index (CI) obtained independently of the EI. The CI calculation is based on the fact that reflectances in channels 1, 2 and 6 are much lower for clear than for cloudy pixels. The CI is calculated as a simple mean over the three channels of the MODIS false-color image and over all the pixels of the SW and NE zones. In this way the CI gives us the level of cloudiness of the scene. The lower the CI, the clearer the scene, except in the presence of snow/ice pixels. However, we know that the simple mean of channels 1, 2 and 6 cannot differentiate cloud from snow/ice as their reflectances are similar for channels 1 and 2. Thus, we take advantage of the 1 km Quality Assurance field. The latter includes the MODIS Cloud Mask with four states, ‘clear’, ‘cloudy’, ‘mixed’ and ‘assumed clear’, as well as an independent ‘snow/ice’ flag for each pixel. We can thus calculate a mean reflectance for each pixel state. The mean CI value obtained from all ‘clear and not snow/ice’ pixels is low (25) and the mean CI value obtained from all cloudy pixels is significantly higher (80) as expected (there is no significant difference between the SW and NE zones). The mean CI value for snow/ice pixels is quite high (65) whereas they should be clear pixels (and will disturb our clear/cloudy ratio). We thus assign these pixels the preceding mean CI ‘clear and not snow/ice’ value of 25. There is no CI for the SV zone, as the latter is too small to produce a significant reflectance mean.
The CI may be sensitive to non-corrected effects:
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1. Surface reflectances may vary depending on the acquisition geometry and vegetation (Reference Maignan, Bréon and LacazeMaignan and others, 2004). We verify that this has negligible impact on the CI. As a first test, we calculate the standard deviation over 1 year of the CI for the NE and SW zones and we do the same considering only clear pixels. The former is three to four times higher than the latter, demonstrating that directional or vegetation-growth effects are of second order compared with the impact of clouds on the CI. As a second test, we calculate the mean visible reflectance (channel 1) and the mean near-infrared reflectance (channel 2) over the NE and SW zones and verify that they share the same seasonal behavior. An influence of vegetation growth should yield a decrease in channel 1 associated with an increase in channel 2.
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2. The CI may be sensitive to shadows generated by the topography, depending on the acquisition geometry (Reference Lopez, Sirguey, Arnaud, Pouyaud and ChevallierLopez and others, 2008). Indeed, as the local acquisition time is quasi-constant, the solar zenithal angle exhibits a seasonal cycle. The only region where we observe such a topographic effect is the SV zone, where the rocky side is more or less dark depending on the solar zenithal angle. However, as this zone is too small, we do not calculate the CI over the San Valentín. For the observer, the contrast between the rocky and the snowy side of the San Valentín remains strong enough year-round to be used as a criterion for the EI discrimination between clear and cloudy scenes.
To check our CI, we also calculated a cloud index based only on the MODIS Cloud Mask classification for the SW and NE zones over our first complete year, 2001 (CI-Cloud Mask). We attribute to each pixel a numerical value of 0 in the clear cases (‘clear’, ‘assumed clear’ and ‘snow’), 2 in the ‘mixed’ case and 4 in the ‘cloudy’ case, and for each zone we calculate the corresponding average over all pixels. The CI/CI-Cloud Mask correlations, r, are 0.88 and 0.91 for the SW and NE zones respectively, which is highly significant (p < 0.001).
We have compared the daily EI and CI values for the SW and NE zones for each year. The covariance, r 2, is always >70% and increases to 80–85% for the 5 day running average (p < 0.001).
2.3.2. Calculation of normalized-difference snow index (NDSI)
As a validation of the EI for the SV zone, we use the normalized-difference snow index (NDSI) which is calculated as a normalized difference between the spectral reflectance values of visible and SWIR bands (Reference Hall, Riggs and SalomonsonHall and others, 1995). We calculate this index for the complete first year, 2001, using channels 1 and 6. A low value of NDSI will indicate a cloudy pixel whereas a high value is indicative of snow/ice presence. It is worth noting that vegetation and surface water will introduce errors in the NDSI detection skills (Reference Parajka and BlöschlParajka and Blöschl, 2006; Reference Shreve, Okin and PainterShreve and others, 2009) and furthermore we are not interested in determining the snow-cover extent; we are interested in the cloud cover. That is why we do not use this index for both SW and NE zones. The correlation between the EI and the NDSI over the SV zone, r, is −0.85 and increases to −0.90 (p < 0.001) for the 5 day running average (we expect a negative correlation as the NDSI/nebulosity is inverse to the EI/nebulosity relationship).
2.3.3. Comparison between in situ pictures and satellite images
We also compare some in situ pictures from 2000–08 with the corresponding MODIS satellite images. We have 40 in situ pictures of the San Valentín site, corresponding to 19 days (we have 10 days with at least two in situ pictures at two different hours). On each in situ picture we can evaluate the SV cloud cover. Most of the time, the cloud cover of the region from which the picture is made is visible. When several pictures are available for one day, we choose the one closest to the satellite acquisition hour (so our comparison relies on n = 19). Figure 2 illustrates the comparison for three days in 2007 with different EIs. All of the in situ pictures showing a clear sky (EI = 0) or a thick cloud cover (EI = 1) for the SV zone (n = 17) have been assigned to the correct EI. We obtain the same correspondence for the NE (n = 8) and SW (n = 1) zones when they are visible. This result is of primary importance, as our initial question deals with the occurrence of clear sky in the SV zone relative to the two other zones. We have two in situ pictures for which an EI of 0.5 is expected for the SV zone. One of them compares with an EI of 0 on the MODIS satellite images. We observe that this picture was obtained in late evening (1900 h), much later than the MODIS visit (section 2.4). It is important to note that our comparison is valid for clear or cloudy sky (EI of 0 or 1) as we have only two pictures (11%) with an EI of 0.5.
Finally, we organized two field campaigns in 2006 and 2007 for which we have direct observations on the San Valentín summit for each day (i.e. 4 and 13 days respectively). The comparison between observations at the summit made close to the time of the satellite pass and MODIS images leads to a score of 100%.
2.3.4. EI: observer-dependent?
The EI could be highly observer-dependent despite the high correlations with the CI. To evaluate the observer influence, two observers computed this index for the first complete year, 2001, which has 332 available images. The number of similar EI levels is 240 (72%), 205 (62%) and 274 (83%) for the SW, NE and SV zones respectively. The differences mainly occur for the attribution of an EI of 0.5 versus an EI of 1 and conversely, with no impact on the clear-state attribution for the SV zone.
Our initial question leads us to estimate the cloudiness for the SV zone in relation to the surrounding areas. We thus need to determine the nebulosity for our three zones using the same index. The EI appears to be the most suitable candidate as we were able to validate it in different ways for the different zones. Nonetheless our method has some important caveats which we describe next.
2.4. Possible caveats of the methodology
We are aware that our methodology leads to important limitations, so important caveats must be mentioned:
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1. The MODIS satellite image acquisition occurs twice per day at 1030 h for Terra and 1330 h for Aqua (local time). A possible shift occurs around this time, depending on the acquisition geometry. We estimated this shift to be less than ±1 hour by examining the solar zenithal angle evolution over 1 year. We also compared a former version of our CI relying on channels 1, 2 and 3 for Terra and Aqua (channel 6 is not available for Aqua) for 2005 (341 used days). We found no significant evolution of the nebulosity either in the SW or in the NE region between the two acquisition times (in 2005, n = 341; for the NE (SW) zone r = 0.98 (0.97), p < 0.001). As Terra has the longest time series (from 2000), we used only this sensor, and studied the nine years from 2000 to 2008. However, our study does not capture any possible daily cloudiness cycle (e.g. consistent cloud formation in the late afternoon). By examining the in situ pictures mentioned in section 2.3, we find ten days for which we have several pictures per day. Table 2 shows the intra-day EI evolution for the SV zone. The cloudiness is near constant, except for 29 April 2007 when the nebulosity disappears during the day.
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2. The NE zone is a mountainous area and might not reflect the regional cloudiness eastwards. Similarities between this zone and the SV zone could thus arise from the NE zone definition.
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3. We are aware that this approach does not give any information about precipitation rate, as there is no basic relationship between precipitation and cloudiness in this mountainous area owing to orographic cloud formation (Reference Rasmussen, Conway and RaymondRasmussen and others, 2007). However, whilst cloud cover does not imply precipitation, precipitation cannot occur without clouds. We therefore wish to determine whether there is an exceptionally low cloudiness on this highest glacier that could partly explain a reduced precipitation rate. Nonetheless, we have examined for each zone and each year the correlation between the daily EIs and ERA-I precipitation rate (no precipitation data exist in our studied zone) (Reference BerrisfordBerrisford and others, 2009). The correlation, r, is always higher than 0.5 and never lower than 0.63 for the SV zone except in 2003 (0.58) (p < 0.001). It is also interesting to note that the lowest monthly EI occurs during February (Fig. 3) which also records the lowest precipitation rate from 2000 to 2008 according to ERA-I reanalyses (for the NE zone, 4.3% of annual mean precipitation, the highest contribution being ∼12% in June). Although we do not believe that this comparison with precipitation reanalyses provides a robust test, because of the poor quality of precipitation reanalyses in this region, we think it is worth mentioning it.
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4. Finally, we consider an important limitation concerning ice crystal clouds (cirrus) that are considered as non-precipitating. Indeed, part of our study could be biased because our approach deals with vertically integrated satellite images. As we were able to distinguish icy clouds, an EI of 0 (‘clear’) was assigned where we observed only this type of cloud (for the SV zone, ∼10–15%). The comparison with in situ pictures (section 2.3) confirms that we can attribute an EI of 0 when only cirrus is detected. However, some cloudy situations (∼10% for the SV zone) correspond to a superimposition of different types of cloud, so we may attribute as a cloudy case for the SV zone the situation corresponding to a low cloud cover on the icefield, a clear San Valentín summit and icy clouds at high altitude.
3. Results and Discussion
Our definition of EI leads to 27 possible permutations. Their mean annual occurrences from 2000 to 2008 are shown in Figure 4. The ten most frequent cases (>7 a−1) represent 87.8% of the total occurrences (Fig. 4 legend). The dominant situation is a cloud cover over the three zones (34.4% of annual occurrences (e.g. Fig. 1c)), and the second most common is a global clear sky (17.1% of annual occurrences (e.g. Fig. 1e)). If we also account for the global mixed situation (EI = 0.5 for the three zones), our observations show that a homogeneous cloudiness over the three zones occurs for more than half the year (54.4%). As an initial response to our question, we also examine the occurrence of the case for which EI_SV = 0 and EI = 1 for both the SW and NE zones (e.g. Fig. 1d and easily detectable). This case only represents 1.9% of the total occurrences (7.34 a−1) and no seasonality is detected (Fig. 5).
Interestingly, the two dominant cases (the three cloudy or clear zones) exhibit a similar seasonality, with higher occurrence during the austral winter (up to 40% and 25% respectively), i.e. in the rainiest season (Fig. 5). This is in agreement with our knowledge of the precipitation regime in the region. During the austral winter, the subpolar low is more intense. This situation combined with the equatorial displacement of the Pacific high and with ocean temperatures that are higher than continental temperatures, leads to an increase in precipitation over Patagonia that could explain a more frequent homogeneous cloud cover at a regional scale. However, this period also corresponds to southerly and southeasterly advections that are four times more frequent (Reference Schneider, Glaser, Kilian, Santana, Butorovic and CasassaSchneider and others, 2003) and associated with clear sky (Reference Paruelo, Beltrán, Jobbágy, Sala and GolluscioParuelo and others, 1998). This confirms that our study can capture some linkage variations between precipitation regime and cloudiness.
We have also calculated the temporal EI evolution (Fig. 3) over the 2000–08 period to explore the evolution of cloudiness during the year for each zone. Significant correlations (p < 0.001) between the three indices are calculated for both daily (SW–NE, r 2 = 0.46; SW–SV, r 2 = 0.36; NE–SV, r 2 = 0.56) and monthly (SW–NE, r 2 = 0.14; SW–SV, r 2 = 0.31; NE–SV, r 2 = 0.72) timescales. The differences between the 5 day running average EI only vary between −0.2 and +0.4 (Fig. 3b–d), revealing, as above, that the SV zone does not have a significantly different cloudiness. This holds true throughout the year, and specifically during the rainiest season when differences only vary between −0.1 and +0.1 (Fig. 3c and d).
The temporal evolution also illustrates an interesting observation. The SW zone is slightly cloudier than the two other zones, especially during austral summer (EI differences are positive for most of the time, between 0 and +0.4; Fig. 3b and c), while the annual cloudiness histories for the NE and SV zones are very close (EI differences are between −0.1 and +0.1 all year; Fig. 3d). Three reasons can be identified:
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1. A higher frequency of westerlies during the austral summer according to ERA-I reanalyses, leading to more advected humidity from the Pacific Ocean (Castañeda and others, 2008). This presence of additional water in the SW zone atmosphere is confirmed by (a) a clear seasonal cycle in the specific humidity (Δseas = 0.06 kg kg−1) from the ERA-I reanalyses over the 2000–07 mean period, with maximum values from December to March (∼0.016 kg kg−1); (b) a clear seasonal cycle in precipitable water (Δseas = 0.8 g cm−2) from PARASOL satellite cloud products (we downloaded from the ICARE Data and Services Center the PARASOL hdf monthly Cloud Cover product, available from 2005 to 2007 at a spatial resolution of 18 km; higher than the MODIS cloud products available at 0.5° resolution (Reference ParolParol and others, 2008)), with maximum values from November to March (∼1.3 g cm−2); and (c) a clear seasonal cycle in the Rayleigh pressure (Δseas = 100 hPa) from PARASOL cloud products from October to March, up to 650 hPa, suggesting a lower mean cloud altitude.
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2. A barrier effect of the Andes with a well-known effect on the west–east precipitation gradient. Interestingly, the eight cases (among the ten more frequent cases) with occurrences varying from 7.5% to 1.9% (Figs 4 and 5) all correspond to EI_SW > 0, showing also the importance of a yearly presence of cloud cover over the SW region. However, Figure 4 shows that the three cases strictly reflecting the Andes as an orographic barrier (defined as EI_SW = 1 and EI_NE = 0) are very uncommon (3.5%). This proportion increases to 13.8% if we consider the formation of isolated clouds (orographic clouds) at the San Valentín summit (cases with EI_SW = 0 and either EI_SV = 1 or EI_SV and EI_NE = 0.5). Another way to discuss the barrier effect is to compare, for the 2000–08 mean period, the daily EI differences between two adjacent zones (SW and SV; NE and SV) (Fig. 6). We see that two adjacent regions present the same state (‘clear’, ‘cloudy’ or ‘mixed’) 68% of the time. This is particularly true for the NE and SV zones (71%), with only a very few cases of opposite detection (less than ten ‘clear’ versus ‘cloudy’, i.e. 4.6%). This could be due to the definition of the two zones (section 2.4). The comparison between the SW and the SV zone shows 65% of similar cases. However, a significant number of positive adjacent cases (EI_SW–EI_SV = +0.5 or +1, i.e. SW zone is cloudier) are observed (24%). This could reflect the barrier effect: the positive and negative adjacent cases for the NE–SV difference are equivalent (14% and 15% respectively) whereas these values are 24.1% and 8.3% respectively when considering the SW–NE difference.
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3. The local orography in the SW zone. A coastal mountain and numerous fjords (Fig. 1) could create fog at the start of the afternoon (Reference Cereceda and SchemenauerCereceda and Schemenauer, 1991) that could be assigned to cloud when scanning satellite images.
4. Conclusions and Implications for Paleoclimate Studies
Our initial question deals with the possibility of an unusually low cloudiness over the San Valentín summit, in comparison with surroundings, possibly leading to a low precipitation rate and explaining in part the very low accumulation at that site (Reference VimeuxVimeux and others, 2008). Using daily MODIS satellite images from 2000 to 2008, we clearly exclude this hypothesis. We show that the San Valentín summit cloud cover is generally similar to the regional cloudiness (54%) and that the situation where the San Valentín summit is clear while the surrounding regions are cloudy is very uncommon, accounting for <2% of annual occurrences. It is worth noting that the use of the CI leads to similar conclusions.
Our results are not consistent with pilots’ oral reports. We also have in situ pictures showing the San Valentín summit protruding through a lower cloud cover. We suggest that this situation is subconsciously the most spectacular and most memorable. More systematic observations carried out with airplane pilots could help to validate our study.
Wind erosion and snow redeposition are likely to be the main processes controlling the net accumulation at this location. This conclusion is consistent with the accumulation rate observed during field operations in March–April 2006 (several meters of snowfall over 24 hours, though no measurement was made due to the extreme meteorological situation; personal communication from P. Ginot, 2006). It is nonetheless important to keep in mind that our approach deals with vertically integrated satellite images, and that no direct relationship between precipitation and cloudiness is established for this mountainous area. This result indicates the difficulty in using reconstructions of the annual net accumulation from ice cores to estimate atmospheric moisture changes in this region, as has been done for the tropical Andes (e.g. Reference ThompsonThompson and others, 2006).
Our study also enables us to discuss the barrier effect of the mountain range. We show an impact on cloudiness throughout the year, where the SW zone is slightly cloudier, especially during austral winter. However, we identify no strong blocking since cloudiness in the SW zone is higher than in the SV zone for only 24% of the time. Again, our approach considers the total vertical cloud cover, so we cannot decipher the barrier effect for low- and high-altitude clouds. As suggested by Reference Barrett, Garreaud and FalveyBarrett and others (2009), the mountain range might only prevent some low-altitude air masses from crossing the Andes, not detectable with our approach. This means that climate history recorded in the San Valentín ice core may not be fully related to changes in the intensity or position of the westerlies. This was also suggested by Reference VimeuxVimeux and others (2008) when comparing the marine and continental chemical elements recorded in the ice and will have to be accounted for when interpreting the deep ice core (122 m) drilled in 2007.
Finally, we show that the eye scanning of satellite false-color images, which is a very simple methodology, can offer an interesting approach to evaluate cloudiness. The ongoing analyses of several ice cores drilled in 2007 on the San Valentín summit should provide further information on the accumulation type encountered at this high-altitude Patagonian glacier, and will bring information for ice flow modeling at these sites.
Acknowledgements
This work was initiated by fruitful discussions in the framework of the Agence National de la Recherche (France; ANR) SANVALLOR project (ANR-06-BLAN-0245). C.R. was partially funded by the ANR-06-BLAN-0245 project. We thank F.-M. Bréon, F. Chevallier and V. Masson-Delmotte for valuable inputs on the manuscript, and three reviewers for constructive comments. We thank P. Ginot for the pictures of Monte San Valentín shown in Figure 2. The MODIS data are distributed by the Land Processes Distributed Active Archive Center, located at the US Geological Survey (USGS) Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS) Center (lpdaac.usgs.gov). We thank the ICARE Data and Services Center for providing access to CNES/PARASOL data.