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Glaciological Problems Set by the Control of Dangerous Lakes in Cordillera Blanca, Peru. I. Historical Failures of Morainic Dams, their Causes and Prevention

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 January 2017

Louis Lliboutry
Affiliation:
Laboratoire de Glaciologie du CNRS, Grenoble, France
Benjamín Morales Arnao
Affiliation:
Instituto de Geología y Minería, Lima, Peru
André Pautre
Affiliation:
Géoconseil, La Celle-St-Cloud, France
Bernard Schneider
Affiliation:
Coyne et Bellier, Paris, France
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Abstract

The retreat of glaciers since 1927 in Cordillera Blanca has produced dangerous lakes at the front of many glaciers. All the known data, most of them unpublished, are reviewed. The known aluviones are listed, and those of Chavin, Quebrada Los Cedros and Artesoncocha described in full. In these three cases a breach in the front moraine came from big ice falls into the lake. The protective devices made on the outlets are described, as well as the effects of the big earthquake on 31 May 1970. In the case of Laguna Parón, which keeps its level thanks to infiltrations, the fluctuations of the discharge of the springs as related to the level of the lake from 1955 to 1969 are reported. The projects for lowering the level of Laguna Parón and for emptying Safuna Alta are described. The latter partially emptied in fact by piping after the earthquake, allowing a final solution.

Résumé

Résumé

Le retrait des glaciers depuis 1927 dans la Cordillera Blanca a créé des lacs dangereux au front de nombreux glaciers. On passe en revue tous les documents disponibles, la plupart non publiés. La liste des aluviones connus est établie, et ceux de Chavin, de la Quebrada Los Cedros et d'Artesoncocha complètement décrits. Dans les trois cas la brèche dans la moraine frontale fut la conséquence de grosses chutes de glace dans le lac. On décrit les ouvrages de protection faits sur les exutoires, ainsi que les effets du tremblement de terre du 31 Mai 1970. Dans le cas de la Laguna Paron, qui maintient son niveau grâce à des infiltrations, on donne les variations du débit des sources en fonction du niveau du lac entre 1955 et 1969. On décrit les projets pour baisser le niveau de la Laguna Paron et pour vider Safuna Alta. Cette dernière se vida à moitié en fait après le séisme par formation de renards, permettant une solution définitive.

Zusammenfassung

Zusammenfassung

Der Gletscherrückgang in der Cordillera Blanca seit 1927 hat zur Bildung gefährlicher Seen vor der Zunge vieler Gletscher geführt. Alle bekannten Daten, die meist noch unveröffentlicht sind, werden herangezogen. Die bekannten Ausbrüche (aluviones) werden aufgeführt, jene von Ghavin, Quebrada Los Cedros und der Artesoncocha ausführlich beschrieben. In den drei Fällen führten gewaltige Eislawinen in den See zu Brüchen in der Damm-Moräne. Die Schutzmassnahmen an den Ausflüssen werden beschrieben, ebenso die Auswirkungen des grossen Erdbebens vom 31. Mai 1970. Für den Laguna Paron, der sein Niveau infolge von Infiltrationen halten kann, werden die Änderungen der Quellschüttung im Vergleich zur Höhe des Seespiegels zwischen 1955 und 1969 zusammengestellt. Die Pläne zur Absenkung des Laguna Paron und zur Leerung der Safuna Alta werden beschrieben. Die letztere leerte sich in der Tat zur Hälfte nach dem Erdbeben durch Rohrleilungs-bildung und erlaubte eine endgültige Lösung.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1977

Historical

In this article and the two companion papers, field data collected in Cordillera Blanca, Peru, during the years 1967 to 1970 are reported. Since then they have been lying in drawers as unpublished and even restricted reports (Coyne et Bellier, Géoconseil, unpublished [a] to [e]; Lliboutry and others, unpublished).

In order to lower the water level in two dangerous lakes, Paron and Safuna Alta, the hydroelectric power agency of the Rio Santa basin known as Corporación Peruana del Santa, CPS (now united with other power agencies of Peru to form Electroperú), hired in 1967 as consultants two engineering offices, Coyne et Beliier and Géoconseil, from Paris. Parón was visited in February 1967 by Lliboutry. Morales, Pautre and Post; Safuna in July 1967 by Lliboutry, Morales and Pautre. From July 1967 to May 1969, B. Schneider remained in the Gallejon de Huaylas to supervise the workings (Callejón de Huaylas is the valley of upper Santa river, between Cordillera Blanca and Cordillera Negra). In May 1969, the late J. Grador, with Lliboutry and Pautre, came back to Peru to study several lakes which may be used for hydroelectricity around Nevado Santa Cruz. This time they had at their disposal an Alouette III, the only helicopter able to fly at an altitude over 6 000 m.

Then the big castastrophe of 31 May 1970 took place. Yungay and its 15 000 inhabitants disappeared under the mud, 90% of the buildings of Huaraz were destroyed by the earthquake, 70% of Caraz and Carhuâs, B. Morales and other engineers of CPS who were living in the Callejon were lucky to survive. On 9 and 10 June Morales was able to fly in a helicopter over the main dangerous lakes, together with Lliboutry (who had been sent by UNESCO, on request of the Peruvian government). Also at the request of Peru, UNESCO and PNUD sent a commission to study possible sites for new cities. It was formed by B. Schneider, Professor V. Mencl from Brno and Dr M. Vallon from Grenoble. They remained in the area from August to October 1970, and among other surveys examined the dangerous lakes above Carhuás and Huaraz.

Cartography and Aerial Coverages

Until recently the only detailed map of the area were the two sheets at the scale of 1: 100 000 drawn from terrestrial photogrammetry in 1932 and 1939 and known as Kinzl's map.

During the Cordillera-Blanca Expedition des Deutschen und Österreichischen Alpenvereins 1932 (under the leadership of Dr Borchers), E. Hein, B. Lukas and H. Kinzl surveyed the northern part of Cordillera Blanca and Callejón dc Huaylas between Nevado Ghampará and Huaraz. The corresponding sheet was published in 1935 in Die Weisse Kordillere (Borchers, editor). Explanations are given in Reference KinzlKinzl (1942). The bottom of many quebradas, specially the region of the Safuna lakes could not be plotted.

During the Anden-Kundfahrt des Deutschen Alpenvereins in 1939-40, K. Heckler and H. Kinzl surveyed the southern part. The sheet was printed in 1945 and included in the first issue of the Zeitschrift Gletscherkunde und Glazialgeologie (1949). It was published again with explanations in Reference KinzlKinzl (1964).

Meanwhile aerial coverages of the Cordillera had been made. The United States Air Force (USAF) took trimetrogon pictures in 1943 and a single line of vertical photographs in 1948 (project No. 3093). In 1948-50 the Servicio Aerofotogrâfico Nacional (SAN) of the Peruvian Air Force covered the Cordillera Blanca, using a camera of 23 cm × 23 cm, with a focal length of 6 inches (0.152 4 m) (project No. 2524). The altitude of flight was 27 000 ft (8 230 m). With these pictures an orthophotoplan at scale 1: 20 000, and then a reduction at 1: 142 000 were made, on sale at SAN.

Under contract AST 9 of the lnstituto Geográfico Militar del Perú (IGM), the USAF made a coverage of a great part of Peru in 1962-63, using the same type of camera, and with a flight altitude of 30 000 ft (9 144 m). It is now being plotted, simultaneously by IGM and by the Servicio Cartográfico del Ministerio de Agricultura para Reforma Agraria y Catastro, in order to draw maps at 1: 25 000, but priority has been given to areas which do not include Cordillera Blanca.

Under contract from Corporación Peruana del Santa, the SAN made its own coverage of Cordillera Blanca in 1966-68 (Project No. I47-66-A), again with a focal length of 6 inches, (0.152 4 m), and with 26 000 ft (7 925 m) as altitude of flight, and plotted it at scale 1: 25 000. It is an invaluable document, but with very poor drawing of the limits of glaciers, and available only as ozalid copies,

Thus for Safuna for instance we had at our disposal vertical stereoscopic pairs taken in 1950, 1963, 1966 and 1968. When the land is at an altitude of 4 420 m and the flights were made at 30 000 ft (9 145 m), 27 000 ft (8 230 m) and 26 000 R (7 925 m), the scale of the contact pictures is respectively 1 : 31 000, 1 : 25 000 and 1 : 23 000.

After the disaster, the Callejón de Huaylas and the western slopes of the Cordillera Blanca were covered by SAN (Project 176-70-A) and NASA (13-18 July 1970, at 28000 ft (8 535 m))·

Formation of Lakes on Glacial Tongues

With the exception of Huascarán None (6 655 m), which had been climbed in 1908 by Miss Peck with two guides from Zermatt (R. Taugwalder and G. Zumtaugwald), all the summits of the Cordillera Blanca were virgin when the German-Austrian expedition of 1932 took place. They ascended nine summits, including the highest peak, Huascarán Sur (6 768 m). Thus there are no photographs prior to 1932 which may be used to study the variations of glaciers. The only quantitative data have been given by Reference KinzlKinzl (1942). On the eastern side of Cordillera Blanca, close to the Atlante mine, there is a small glacier (length: 2 km), which flows northwards from Pakcharaju (5 741 m) to 5 040 m. It advanced by 12-15 m in 1923-24 and shut one entrance of the mine. It began to recede in 1927. In 1932, when Kinzl visited it, its end was 45 m from the push moraine, and by 1939 it had receded about 60 m more.

This advance is almost synchronous with the one in the Alps in the years 1920-21. Almost all glaciers of Cordillera Blanca lay behind huge push moraines of the Little Ice Age which dam a lake. There are evident signs that glaciers reached these moraines again during this century (Reference Lliboutry, Lliboutry, Morales and SchneiderLliboutry and others, 1977). Thus we may assert that the big and general recession of glaciers, which began in the Alps around 1866, only began around 1923-24 in Cordillera Blanca. (Perhaps the apparent priority of the 1920-21 advance in the Alps comes from the superimposed secular trend, which obliterated the effect of favourable balances in 1921-24.)

Fig. 1. Development of Laguna de Safuna Alta.

Fig. 2. Map of the northern part of Cordillera Blanca.

The recession of glaciers since 1932 has been considerable, but often its beginning would have passed unnoticed if the positions of the fronts had been surveyed each year, as is done in Switzerland and elsewhere. First one of several ponds of water appear in the tongue. They unite, enlarge, and a supraglacial lake is formed, which grows until it reaches the push moraine. With the proximity of sun-heated bare ground the process reinforces itself.

Figure 1 gives the evolution of Laguna de Safuna Alta. In 1932, according to Kinzl (personal communication), there was no lake at all. In 1950 there was only a pool of water in a hollow of the glacier. On 19 March 1969, we measured a volume of water of 4.85 × 106 m3, which threatened the small town of Huallanca, 40 km down-stream. Its form was irregular because of the existence of a medial moraine, and the stream of ice on the left discharges more ice than the one on the right.

Between 1932 or 1939 (Kinzl's maps) and 1948 50 (SAN photoplan), about ten big lakes appeared between Qucbrada Ulla (over Carhuás) and Quebrada Shallap (over Huaraz): Lagunas Hualca, Cochca, Lejia, Paccharuri, Akilpo, Ishinca, Llaca, Tuilparaju. . . . (Laguna is Spanish; often the Quetchuan name cocha is used; thus we must say: Hualcacocha, Lejiacocha.) In the sketch map (Fig. 2), drawn from the SAN photoplan, these lakes are numbered according to the Comisión de Control de la Lagunas de la Cordillera Blanca (CCLCB). The main proglacial lakes of Cordillera Blanca are given in Table I, with all the data we could gather about them. In this table 1932-50, for instance, means that there was no lake in 1932 and there was one in 1950; -0950 means that the first picture available dates back to 1950, and the lake existed at this time; >1950 that there was no lake in 1950, and there was one in 1961; 1950 that there was only a pond of water in 1950. The volumes in parentheses were those before the lakes were lowered.

After a proglacial lake has completely developed, new ponds of water may form up-stream on the glacier tongue. For instance Laguna Llaca, 400 m long, formed between 1939 and 1948. Between 1948 and 1968, the glacier front did not recede, but four ponds of water, with surfaces from 100 to 2 000 m2 appeared. Simultaneously there was a lowering of the whole glacier tongue, its surface turning from convex to concave (Lliboutry and others, unpublished).

Fig. 3. Glaciar Kogan (north-east face of Alpamayn), with many small ponds of water on its tongue. Below (upper left), Laguna Jancarurish. (Picture from helicopter by L.Lliboutry. May 1969.)

Table I. Proîilacial lakhs in cordillera blanca

Many ponds of water have appeared on Glaciar Kogan, well above Laguna Tancarurish (Fig. 3

The glacier ending in Laguna Tullparaju receeded by 300 m between 1950 and 1962, but no change was seen between 1962 and 1970 (Lliboutry and others, unpublished). Laguna de Safuna increased on one side but there was almost no change on the strongest stream of ice. Thus it seems that the recession of glaciers reached its climax and is decreasing.

Known Aluviones

An aluvión (plural; aluviones) is a very big and sudden flood of liquid mud, generally carrying big boulders, whatever may be its cause. A Quelchuan name is huayco, which is used for muddy floods of any size. Aluviones are the plague of the fertile and heavily populated Callejón de Huaylas.

The biggest ones have come from huge rock and ice avalanches starting from the top of Huascarân Norte: in (his way Ranrahirca was drowned on 10 January 1962 with 4 000 dead (B. Reference Morales ArnaoMorales, 1966); Ranrahirca and Yungay on 31 May 1970 with 15000 dead (Reference Welsch and KinzlWelsch and Kinzl, 1970; Reference Plafker, Plafker, Ericksen and Fernandez ConchaPlafkcr and others, 1971; Reference LliboutryLliboutry, [1975]). These avalanches eroded the firn of Glaciar 511 below; next they eroded warm loose earth which melted ice and firn. In this way a liquid mud was formed, but no lake was involved.

The first historical record of an aluvión, by Th. Haenke in Descripción del Perú (Lima, 1901), a book which we could not consult, happened on 6 January 1725 (in Reference KinzlKinzl, 1968, 1625 is quoted, which is a misprint, cf. G. Reference Morales ArnaoMorales, 1968). The village of Ancash, close to Yungay and north of it was destroyed and its I 500 or 2 000 inhabitants killed by an aluvión coming from Huandoy. Aerial photographs show that it was undoubtedly formed by the destruction of a lake at the head of Quebrada Ancash.

There was no aluvión reported again in the Cordillera Blanca until the year 1938, when, on 20 January, one occurred in Quebrada Ulla, without loss of lives (Reference KinzlKinzl, 1940). It came from the rupture of Pacllashcocha, better known under the name of Laguna Artesa. (A previous one, in 1930, reported in CPS, unpublished, seems to be an error.) Nevertheless, according to V. M. Philipps*, there was one on 14 March 1932 in Cordillera Huayhuash, just south of Cordillera Blanca. It came from the rupture of Laguna Soltera, or Huancacocha, in Quebrada Pacllón.

Next, on 13 December 1941, came the disaster of Huaraz which destroyed one-third of this city, killing more than 6000 inhabitants. The aluvión was caused by the rupture of Palcacocha, in Quebrada Cohup. After this disaster the Comision de Control de Lagunas de la Cordillera Blanca was set up, which began to lower the level and strengthen the outlets of the most dangerous lakes, as we shall explain later.

On 17 January 1945 the small town of Chavin dc Huantar (today: Chavin arqucológico), on the eastern side of Cordillera Blanca was destroyed by an aluvión coming from Quebrada Huachescsa down-valley of Huantsân (6 395 m). There were many dead, among whom were the prefect of the province of Ancash, and invaluable archaeological material was lost. Chavin had indeed been the main centre of the first great civilization in Peru. Its temples and castles have been dated 850 B.C. by 14C (Reference Kauffmann DoigKauffmann, 1973, p. 180, 203). We may assert then that there were no aluviones in Chavin during those times.

According to Reference SpannSpann (1947), who visited the area eleven months later, the aluvión was produced by a big rock-fall from Huantsán on the debris-covered glacier at its foot. His guide told him that there were formerly “some lakes and swamps (pantanos) known as Laguna de Ayhuinaraju”. (Ayhuiñaraju is the local name of Huantsán on its eastern side.) When one of us (B.M.) visited the area, he saw a lake almost emptied by the ice fall, but still 150 m long,

* In a popular account on abuviones published in 1962 in No. 24 of Ingenisria (Lima).

with its destroyed morainic dam. The swamp which was swept down is found half a kilometer down-valley.

On the aerial views taken three or five years later, this event is hardly noticeable, the lake being infilled with ice. It lies on the right of the main and covered glacier tongue and 200 m higher, at about 4 800 m. The rock-fall came from the southern summit of Huantsán, on another glacier, a clean one.

Lower down the valley, the trace of the aluvión cannot be clearly seen, until the last 7 km before Chavin. It is then at most 50 m wide. There is a big difference with the aluvión of Huaraz which, although three years older, appears as the most striking feature of the same aerial coverage.

On 20 October 1950, Laguna Jancarurish was destroyed during the workings of the CCLCB to lower its level. The aluvión which flowed down Quebrada Los Cedros killed perhaps 500 people, although 200 are mentioned in official reports.

Artesoncocha, behind Laguna Paron, was destroyed twice, on 17 July 1951 and 29 October 1951, without producing any damage down-valley, as explained later.

Other ruptured lakes may be seen on the aerial photographs of 1948-50: on the eastern glacier of Huascarán (Quebrada Matará, a tributary of Quebrada Ulta), at about 4 450 m; on north-east of Chopicalqui, in Quebrada Shantoc, at about 4410 m; Allicocha, on the eastern side of Cordillera Blanca; and behind Laguna Parón, Chacrucocha, which we were able to visit in 1967 (Fig. 4).

The big earthquake of 31 May 1970 did not lead to the destruction of any morainic dams on the western side of Cordillera Blanca, but this was not true on the eastern side. Yanacocha-chica, in Quebrada Putaca, and a lake at the head of Quebrada Huichajanca emptied, both flooding the Pompei mine.

Fig. 4. Laguna Parón from the east. In the foreground, from left to right: Chacrucocha emptied by a breach in the morainic dam, lake 69, and the aluvial fan resulting from the rupture of Artesoncocha. (Picture from helicopter by L. Lliboutry. May 1969.)

What an Aluvión Looks Like. Morphological Consequences

Ghiglino (unpublished) has given a precise description of the aluvión in Quebrada Los Cedros, in 1950. Its average velocity in the Quebrada, 20 km long, and Canon del Pato, was 33km per hour, much lower than the Huascarân avalanche (which covered 1 3.8 km at an average velocity of over 360 km/h), but much faster than ordinary mudflows. The wetted section varied, according to the slope, between 400 and 2 300 m*. The flow rose at bends of the valley, on the concave slope, up to 24 m in the lower Santa Valley at 123 km of the railroad from Chimbote. The average discharge was estimated by Ghiglino to be 7 000-8 000 m3/s, the volume of water involved at 2 × 106 m3, although 6 to 10 × 106 m3 seem more credible, as explained below. The volume of alluvium deposited in the bed of Rio Santa was estimated at 3 × 106 m3, which seems also to be a conservative figure. In places the deposit was 2 m thick, and one dam as much as 45 m high was formed, but in other places the soil was eroded down to a depth of 6 m.

As an example of the ability of such an aluvión to transport big boulders, a 5 m × 7 m × 25m concrete bridge pillar, weighing 2 000 Mg, was carried 20 km down the valley.

Eye-witnesses said that first an avalanche of solid material appeared. A few seconds later black mud appeared between the stones. Progressively it turned into a muddy stream, running between two raised, very slowly moving, levees. 50 min after beginning, the solid discharge was still 30%.

With such descriptions in mind, to walk in the break of the frontal moraine through which a lake has emptied, as at Ghacrucocha, is an impressive experience. A brooklet now trickles on an avenue of pebbles, 20 to 30 m wide, between two vertical earth cliffs about 50 m high. Down-stream, in the case of a local event such as this one, there is an aluvial fan without sorting, a typical sandur. Many fans in former glacial valleys, previously considered as the result of progressive construction by streams, should in fact be considered as the result of such catastrophic events at the end of the ice age, as proved by the presence of unsortcd big boulders embedded at random within them.

Failure of Morainic Dams with Open-air Outlets, and Their Prevention

The young morainic dams of Cordillera Blanca, as elsewhere, are formed by a mixture of angular debris of any size, sand and silt, with very little clay. In many parts layers of silty sand and gravel, without any big boulders are found. In Figure 5 the distribution function of the sizes in samples from the moraine surrounding Laguna de Safuna Alta are drawn. There is about 10-15% of fine sand, silt and clay with Ø < 0.2 mm and 30-50% of pebbles and boulders with Ø > 2 cm. Thus most moraines are pervious and even when there is an open-air outlet, springs are found at their foot.

In the case of an open-air outlet, the cutting of the unconsolidated dam by regressive erosion is the obvious process which unlatches the aluvión. Nevertheless the initial cause of the starting of this rapid erosion has been controversial. All the aluviones which are exactly dated, with the exception of Los Cedros and Artesoncocha, took place during the rainy season which extends from October to April in Cordillera Blanca They are (not including Chavin):

Huaraz: 13 December   Ulta: 20 January

Ancash: 6 January   Pacllón: 14 March

Nevertheless we do not know if there was an open-air outlet in every case.

On the other hand in two well-known cases, Los Cedros and Artesoncocha the disaster came (and in a third case, Tullparaju, it might have come) from big waves which overflowed the free-board, following big ice falls into the lake.

Fig. 5. Grain sizes from cares of the moraine of Safuna Alta, und from its veneer of scree.

Artesoncocha (Fig. 6) which appeared between 1932 and 1940, was 500 m long, 250 m wide, and 50 m deep (Reference Kinzl and SchneiderKinzl and Schneider, 1950) in 1948. It is overhung by séracs which regularly fall into the lake. The trace of the waves is clearly seen on the inner (today raised) beach at the other end. The dam has been destroyed twice, and we have a precise description of the events (CPS, unpublished). During the night between 16 and 17 July 1951, an icefall estimated at 4-5 million cubic metres produced a first leakage of the morainic dam. The level of the lake was lowered by 7 m, with the escape of 1.13 million cubic metres of water, which raised the level of Laguna Parón by 0.70 m. A waterfall, 22 m wide was formed on the external side of the dam, and regressive erosion caused its final rupture, three months later. This time 3.52 million cubic metres of water escaped, raising the level of Laguna Parón by 2.0 m. Fortunately these events happened during the dry season, when Laguna Parón (which has no open-air outlet) was at a low level. If it had happened during the rainy season, an aluvión would have flooded the town of Garaz.

In order to avoid such events, the CCLCB, with the aid of CPS, has been consolidating the open-air outlets since 1941, and even lowering the level of the most dangerous lakes. (In 1970 this commission was included in the CPS.) The protective works which have been completed are indicated in Table I.

When the free-board seems insufficient, the level is progressively lowered, 20 cm after 20 cm, by means of a trench. Finally the trench is protected by a sole of concrete, or a large pipe is put at its bottom. On both sides of the mouth of this artificial outlet, the free-board is protected by a pavement of stones or two slabs (called aletas, i.e. small wings) of concrete. The works are completed by an earth dam 10 to 20 m high (B. Reference Morales ArnaoMorales, 1969; Electroperú, unpublished).

The big earthquake of 1970 broke many aletas by settling the moraine below (for this reason stone pavements seem better), and filled in many open-air ducts with debris (so pipes seem better) but did not start any aluvión where protective works had been done. Thus this device has proved to be efficient.

Nevertheless the construction of the duct and the lowering of the lake is a hazardous enterprise as shown by the two following case histories:

Fig. 6. Artesoncocha on 4 February 1967, seen from lake 69. At the upper right corner, Artesonraju.

Fig. 7. Laguna Jancaiunsh, below Glaciar Kogan and Alpamayo. (Picture from helicopter by L. Lliboutry, May 1969.)

In 1953, during the lowering of Laguna Tullparaju, an earth slide on the left bank of the lake raised a 12 m high wave which poured into the trench which had already been dug. The leakage which started was fortunately stopped, after a lowering of the lake by 18 m, thanks 10 some beds of black glacial clay present within the moraine, and to the sandbags thrown in by the workers.

Laguna Jancarurish, in Quebrada Los Cedros had an underground discharge. The freeboard was only 10 m in the middle of the front discharge. It seemed insufficient, since ice avalanches fall continuously into the lake from Glaciar Kogan, forming a regenerated glacier, a big ice apron at the head of the lake (Figs. 7 and 8). In 1949 the CCLCB began to lower the lake by cutting this free-board, digging a trench to lower the lake a little, then closing the mouth and digging the trench a little deeper, and so on. After two years work, the lake had been lowered 15 m. Under the precarious protection of a wooden gate 2 m high, the trench has been deepened two metres more, and a sole of cemented stones was under construction when an unexpected event happened. (In fact Dr Ali Szepessy Schaurek, in a report of 30 January 1950, has put the GPS on its guard against this hazard (Reference ShaurekSzepessy Schaurek, unpublished).

Fig. 8. Sketch of the event which produced the aluvion of Quebrada Los Cedros in 1949

Nobody knew that the ice apron was calved under the lake surface: the water was probably at 4°C at depth and thus had melted the ice. The overhanging part, no longer sustained by the Archimedean force, broke and fell, producing big waves which overflowed and destroyed the gate. There was a fast regressive erosion of the moraine, formed almost exclusively of sand and pebbles. The stones of the sole were swept away, a waterfall formed, which widened while moving towards the lake. Finally the moraine around the gate failed and the big aluvión mentioned above took place. The level of the lake had lowered a further 21 m, and since its surface was 300 000 to 500 000 m2, this gave a sudden discharge of 6 to 10 × 106 m3 of water.

Lakes Discharging Through Infiltrations

Several lakes dammed by frontal moraines have no open outlet, Laguna Taulliraju, the lakes of Safuna and Laguna Parón being the main examples. The outflow is ensured by springs, the discharge of which varies according to the level of the lake. We have good measurements of discharge and levels at Laguna Parón for eight years from 1955 to 1962, and incomplete data for 1966-69. Although the morainic dam of Parón is much larger than the other ones, and with a superimposed slender ice tongue on it, its constitution at the level of the aquifers should be a standard one. The springs are 60 to 75 m below the level of the lake.

As shown in Figure 9, the water level varies annually by 3.4±0.7 m, having its highest value during the most rainy months (February or March, in general), and its lowest value at the end of the dry season (September or October, in general). The relation between level and discharge when both arc increasing is given in Figure 10. (With the exception of the year 1960,

Fig. 9. Above: monthly precipitations at the western tip of Laguna Parón (4 200 m a.s.l.). Below: highest mid lowest levels of the lake.

Fig. 10. Discharge of the springs from Laguna Parón versus level of the lake. Values for raising levels, smoothed by a running mean over 2 points.

during the subsequent lowering the discharge is a little higher for a given level.) The curves have been somewhat smoothed, with a running mean over two points, to make them clearer.

From 1955 to 1957, the curves are almost the same, with an increasing slope, which shows that the earth dam is getting more pervious upwards. For unknown reasons the lowest levels of 1957 and 1958 were a little higher than usual, and probably for this reason the subsequent maxima were also higher. The aquifers should then enlarge since the data from 1958 to 1966 give curves significantly above the former ones. In 1966 there must have been some unknown event (possibly an earthquake) which made the dam less pervious, since the slope became very small. So in February 1969, with the same level as in February 1961, the discharge was only 2.2 m3/s instead of 3.2 m3/s.

It therefore appears that there are continuously erratic changes in the infiltrations. In fact the drying up of some springs and the appearance of new ones has been reported by the observers of GPS. These variations may end in a catastrophic way, either by piping (the Hell Hole earth dam, in California, was destroyed by such an event), or by overflow of the free-board and the subsequent regressive erosion.

After the big earthquake of 1970, the infiltrations increased at Paron, a spring discharging 5 1/s appeared 120 m below Laguna Llaca, and piping occurred at Safuna Alta, as reported below.

Works at Laguna Parón

Laguna Parón fills a U-shaped glacial valley. It covers 1.6 km2 and encloses, at 4 200 m, 75 × 106 m3 of water which threaten Caraz (at 2 285 m) and the hydroelectric power-station of the CPS at Canon del Pato. It has been reported how it was a mere chance that no disaster took place during the rupture of Artesoncocha in 1951. During the rainy season the free-board was less than 2 m. So in 1952 the CCLCB raised the free-board by 2.6 m with a small earth dam, traversed by a provisional wooden duct 20 m long. (Today this wooden duct still exists, but it is rotten and filled in with earth.) The same year an expert from the U.S.A., Dr P. D. Reference TraskTrask (1953) indicated the only safe way to lower the water level: by digging a tunnel about 1 km long within the cliff of fair granodiorite, on the right bank (northern side).

Although above Laguna Paron Artesoncocha and Chacrucocha are empty by now, and other small lakes in formation may be emptied, the danger of big rockfalls or icefalls from Huandoy or Aguja Nevada into the lake always exist, as well as the danger of piping. The works to be done were expensive. They were estimated in 1963 to amount to U.S. $786 000, as detailed below (CPS, unpublished):

Nevertheless with a safe drainage, Laguna Parón could be used for water storage during the dry season, and the investment would be profitable. So the works were agreed in 1968, an access road made the following year, together with the exploratory works. One of us (B.S.) even dived to a depth of 60 m in the lake with professional Peruvian divers to inspect closely the future point where the tunnel will come out, a world record at this altitude (4 200 m) (Reference Jeanneau GraceyJeanneau, 1969). When the 1970 disaster took place the tunnel had been dug. Only the concrete lining, the gate, the last 50 m of tunnel and the final delicate shot to debouch into the lake remained to be done. More urgent needs have prevented the works since then.

Works at Laguna De Safuna Alta

In 196g Safuna Alta was the most dangerous lake of Cordillera Blanca. 4.9 × 106m3 of water were locked between a steep frontal moraine and the glacier. The outer slope of the moraine is 35°, the inner slope 45°. The maximum depth of the lake was 80 m, its surface, at 4 361 m, stood 18 m below the lowest point of the moraine. Several springs, 60 to 108 m below the surface of the lake, ensured the outflow.

How the moraine and the bottom of the lake were explored is dealt with in Reference Lliboutry, Lliboutry, Morales and SchneiderLliboutry and others (1977). Here we report on the works done or projected.

First, in 1968-69, a tunnel was dug through the moraine, 0.80 m above the level of the lake, in order to prevent the level from rising. The loose moraine was held in place by hoops of sectional iron each 0.7 m long, and a casing of concrete.

The lake being entirely surrounded by moraine or ice, it was not possible to dig any tunnels below the water level without first emptying the lake. To do this, powerful pumps, discharging 0.8 m3/s, would be necessary, and, although the existing gallery may be used, they must raise the water by nearly 80 m at the final stage. To do this 400 kW must be available. To set up an electric line to Safuna would cost U.S. $560 000, and to use generator sets $430 000. The use of a turbine, propelled by the resulting waterfall, would lower this sum to $300 000. Nevertheless the delicate problems of coupling the turbine and the pumps had to be solved.

While this project was being studied by Coyne et Beliier the big earthquake of 1970 happened. The whole morainic dam settled and moved. The sole of the existing tunnel, which was 0.80 m above the water level, was found just after the earthquake 0.20 m below, with water flowing out. Fourteen transverse cracks, up to 0.30 m wide had appeared in the casing of concrete, some being over the whole cross-section. The tunnel, perfectly straight before, was tilted: from one entrance, only three-quarters of the other entrance can be seen.

The springs poured normally, but with muddy water. In the subsequent days their discharge grew exponentially. Piping was happening. Fortunately, after the lake had lowered 38 m, it stopped. This allowed Electroperú to make Safuna definitely safe by digging a new tunnel, 152.6 m long, during the subsequent years (Electroperú, unpublished).

References

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Figure 0

Fig. 1. Development of Laguna de Safuna Alta.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. Map of the northern part of Cordillera Blanca.

Figure 2

Fig. 3. Glaciar Kogan (north-east face of Alpamayn), with many small ponds of water on its tongue. Below (upper left), Laguna Jancarurish. (Picture from helicopter by L.Lliboutry. May 1969.)

Figure 3

Table I. Proîilacial lakhs in cordillera blanca

Figure 4

Fig. 4. Laguna Parón from the east. In the foreground, from left to right: Chacrucocha emptied by a breach in the morainic dam, lake 69, and the aluvial fan resulting from the rupture of Artesoncocha. (Picture from helicopter by L. Lliboutry. May 1969.)

Figure 5

Fig. 5. Grain sizes from cares of the moraine of Safuna Alta, und from its veneer of scree.

Figure 6

Fig. 6. Artesoncocha on 4 February 1967, seen from lake 69. At the upper right corner, Artesonraju.

Figure 7

Fig. 7. Laguna Jancaiunsh, below Glaciar Kogan and Alpamayo. (Picture from helicopter by L. Lliboutry, May 1969.)

Figure 8

Fig. 8. Sketch of the event which produced the aluvion of Quebrada Los Cedros in 1949

Figure 9

Fig. 9. Above: monthly precipitations at the western tip of Laguna Parón (4 200 m a.s.l.). Below: highest mid lowest levels of the lake.

Figure 10

Fig. 10. Discharge of the springs from Laguna Parón versus level of the lake. Values for raising levels, smoothed by a running mean over 2 points.