Introduction
The Torngat Mountains in northern Labrador host the only glaciers in Continental North America east of the Rocky Mountains and the southernmost glaciers in the Canadian eastern Arctic. The largest group of glaciers occurs south of Nachvak Fiord in the area of the Selamiut Range, the highest in the Torngat Mountains, yet an area which was overlooked in surveys of the glaciers of Labrador by Mercer (1958) and Reference Fahn and FieldFahn (1975).
The glaciers are all small (< 1.5 km2) and most of them exist in deep cirques with high, overshadowing backwalls which are probably significant to their existence. Reference TannerTanner (1944) questioned the continuing survival of “Miniaturgletscher” in the Torngat Mountains which he illustrated with two pictures of Bryants Glacier, c. 40 km north of the Selamiut Range. Taken in 1908 and 1931, the photographs indicate very substantial recession of the glacier. In recent years, Reference StixStix (unpublished) reported evidence that some glaciers in the Selamiut Range had re-advanced prior to 1979. It seems possible that glaciers in the Torngat Mountains may have rallied in response to climatic deterioration evident in Baffin Island, and elsewhere in the Arctic, according to several indicators (Reference Bradley and MillerBradley and Miller, 1972; Reference Bradley and EnglandBradley and England, 1977). This project began, therefore, with the objective of measuring the mass balance and terminal response of several glaciers, including the largest glacier in the Torngat Mountains.
Torngat Mountains glaciers
The glaciers selected for the program were Superguksoak, the largest glacier in the Torngat Mountains with an area of 1.4 km2 and Minaret Glacier, both in the high Selamiut Range, and Abraham and Hidden Glaciers in the Cirque Mountain Range (Fig. 1). All lie within reasonable walking distance of Ivitak Cove on Nachvak Fiord, which became the location for a base camp.
The glaciers are all cirque glaciers. Superguksoak Glacier might be described as a double cirque glacier since it is fed from two adjacent cirque basins. The cirques open towards the north-west in the case of Abraham and Hidden Glaciers and to the north-east in the case of Minaret Glacier. The terminal section of Superguksoak Glacier surfaces points north. Three of the glaciers are very low in the cirques with 57-70% of their surface area between 800 and 1000 m (Fig. 2). They are overshadowed by very high backwalls which feed snow and debris to the firn down chutes or couloirs. Minaret Glacier is much higher with 62% of its surface area between 1200 and 1400 m (Fig. 2). Consequently, the backwall of Minaret Glacier is lower relative to the ice surface. A survey of ice depths using radio-echo sounder and EM-16 resistivity meter indicated maximum measured depths of 176 m for Superguksoak Glacier, 142 m for Minaret Glacier, and 55 m for Abraham Glacier (personal communication from C. Garrity).
Mass-Balance Methods
Simple mass-balance measurements were made following the methods described in Reference Østrem and StanleyØstrem and Stanley (1966). Networks of aluminum poles were drilled into the glacier surfaces in July 1981, prior to the appearance of bare ice on Superguksoak Glacier and shortly after the first appearance of bare ice on the other glaciers. Initially, 11 poles were set in Superguksoak Glacier, ten in Minaret Glacier, and three in each of Abraham and Hidden Glaciers (Fig. 3). They were set at altitudes varying from 700 m to 1350 m a.s.l. Subsequently, the networks were expanded, particularly in 1983 when a detailed examination of ablation was undertaken (Reference BransonBranson, unpublished). At each site the change in snow- or ice-surface elevation could be measured relative to the pole.
Measurements proceeded through each summer at irregular intervals, terminating in late August. By this time the first snow had fallen and in 1981 streams on the glacier were completely frozen. However, substantial amounts of melt occurred after the field season. These were evident in the first measurements of the following season when they were made with snow still covering the previous year's ablation surface.
No measurements of gross accumulation and gross ablation were made; such determinations require very long field seasons which are a problem in remote locations. The measurements obtained are of net accumulation (total quantity of snow left at the end of the melt season) and net ablation (total quantity of ice melted during the melt season), and mass balance of a glacier is calculated as the sum of these items. Since the end of the melt season is impossible to forecast or totally reconstruct beyond the pole locations from the first readings of the following year, some careful estimates are included in the calculations. All values are in units of water equivalent (w.e.) assuming a density of 0.9 g cm−3 for ice and using measured values of snow density.
Maps of the glaciers were drawn at scales of 1 :6250 (Superguksoak Glacier), and 1:13 300 from air photographs, and from 1 :50 000 topographic maps. Pole elevations were checked with an altimeter. Superguksoak Glacier was also surveyed from several vantage points with a Brunton compass to triangulate the pole locations and glacier perimeter (Reference BransonBranson, unpublished).
Mass-balance values for each pole were entered on the maps. Isolines constructed on the maps owed much to the experience gained as the field season progressed, especially with respect to snow-line position, areas of slushing, and areas of sediment cover. Mass-balance quantities were obtained by the use of a planimeter on the contour maps (using a Hi State precision digitizer) and multiplying the areas by mean net mass-balance values. The sum of these quantities, divided by the area of the glacier concerned, is the mass balance for that year.
Errors and Deficiencies
There are a number of potential sources of error in this work. Measuring errors may occur during the summer, particularly when excessive sun-cupping makes identification of the melt surface arbitrary. In this work, sun-cups were bridged with an ice-axe laid flat and measurements were made to the point where it crossed the pole. Detection of the firn surface beneath snow with a snow probe was seldom difficult, but it was not confirmed by digging pits at more than a few sites. The distribution of poles was initially made on a subjective basis, but this was subsequently found to be inadequate since very few poles remained above the snow line after the heavy melt of 1983. Slushing and the formation of superimposed ice were dominant in 1981 and 1982, particularly on Minaret and Hidden Glaciers, causing some seemingly anomalous readings, yet they were almost completely absent in 1983 and 1984. Errors probably enter into the drawing of maps, interpretation in areas between poles and beyond the pole network, and estimates of end-of-season conditions. Errors may also occur in the measurement of areas and calculation of mass balances. Despite these, it is felt that the results presented here are consistent with reality and represent the true mass balance to within c. 0.1 m w.e. for each glacier.
Results
Mass-balance results are presented for the four glaciers in Table I for 1981, Table II for 1982, and Table III for 1983. Maps from which the quantities were calculated are displayed in Figures 4 and 5 for 1981, Figures 6 and 7 for 1982, and Figures 8 and 9 for 1983.
Table IV summarizes the mass balance for the four glaciers for the period 1981–83. Abraham and Hidden Glaciers had negative mass balances throughout the period with the largest negative balance in 1983. Minaret and Superguksoak Glaciers also had their largest negative balances in 1983. Both had small positive balances in 1982 and were almost zero in 1981.
Although climatic controls vary the mass balance from year to year, spatial patterns and variations from one glacier to another can probably be attributed to the salient physical characteristics of the glaciers.
Superguksoak Glacier
On this glacier, the highest negative balances occur not at low altitudes near the terminus but 50–200 m higher (Fig. 10). The area of large negative values lies close to the up-glacier limit of thick supraglacial debris cover which forms characteristic medial moraines. On the medial moraines, ice melt is less than half that on bare ice since the debris insulates the ice from warm air and prevents the direct incidence of solar radiation (Reference Rogerson, Rogerson, Olson and BransonRogerson and others, in press). In 1981 and 1982, snow patches survived in the hollows between the medial moraines through until the end of the melt season. In 1983 they all melted. In mid-July 1981 and 1982, the glacier was still entirely snow-covered except for the crests of medial moraines which presumably had been swept free of snow by the wind. In early July 1983, the snow line was already almost as high as the end-of-season snow line in 1982. This can be attributed to very low winter snowfall which affected all of northern Labrador and which resulted in the melting of many semi-permanent snow patches in the mountains. The shortage of snow cover exposed the dark ice surface to solar radiation far earlier in the summer, when the sun is close to its zenith, than in previous years, and this resulted in ablation values which, for many poles, were three to five times higher than in 1982.
Minaret Glacier
This glacier is the most unusual glacier and may not be typical of others in the Torngat Mountains. The terminus of the glacier slopes towards the north-east at a steep angle which keeps much of its surface in shade for a large part of most days in July and August. As a consequence, ablation remains fairly constant or increases up-glacier from the terminus (Fig. 9) and reaches maxima where the glacier surface is almost horizontal, near pole 30 and again near poles 50 and 60. Between these two locations ablation is again reduced although the glacier remains quite level. This appears to be because this area receives much slush from up-glacier which re-freezes to form superimposed ice. In 1983, when slushing was not common on all the glaciers, pole 40 was not so different from its neighbors up and down the glacier.
Minaret Glacier is far higher than the other glaciers studied. It is not overshadowed by high backwalls and therefore, apart from its terminus, experiences long hours of direct solar heating at the surface. The end-of-season snow line is typically much higher than those for the other glaciers, yet is skewed towards the right or southern side of the glacier, as expected. The greater altitude, with cooler temperatures and higher snowfall seems to balance out the greater shading factor of the other glaciers since mass balance is not greatly different for Minaret Glacier than it is for the others.
Hidden Glacier
Hidden Glacier experienced negative mass balance all three years, with 1983 being the most negative. Here, ablation is greatest towards the north of the glacier centre and the snow line extends much further down-glacier on the southern, shaded side. Ablation is at its greatest immediately above the short medial moraines which cover the lower 0.5 km of the terminus. Superimposed ice formed in the middle part of the glacier, where the ice is level, in 1981 and 1982 based on the earliest pole readings of the following year. During both summers, this area was covered by slush which accumulated at the foot of a steep step leading up into the accumulation basin.
Abraham Glacier
Abraham Glacier experienced the highest rates of ablation for any of the glaciers of the Torngat Mountains and consequently the most negative mass balance, reaching a maximum of −1.28 mm w.e. in 1983. In excess of 3 m w.e. of ice melt were measured at pole 10 in 1982 and 1983. Abraham Glacier also has the steepest mass-balance gradient of all the glaciers (Fig. 10) averaging >1 m/100 m. The glacier is heavily crevassed, the area of greatest crevassing also being that of greatest melt. Glacier movement has not been accurately measured but probably exceeds 30 m per year at pole 10.
Abraham Glacier is the only one of the four which measurably re-advanced during the period 1981–84 (Fig. 11) Four measurement points established in 1981 allowed measurement of a mean re-advance of 1.2 m/year for three years. At site B a maximum single-year re-advance of 2.8 m was mesured in 1983. For the terminus as a whole re-advance appears to be decresing in amount through 1984.
Equilibrium Line Altitudes
Equilibrium line altitudes (ELA) can be obtained from plots of elevation versus mass balance (Fig 10). They provide a broad indication of macro-climatic conditions and by their variation indicate the extreme variability of micro-climate conditions in a mountainous region (Reference Andrews and MillerAndrews and Miller, 1972). The overall mean ELA for the glaciers of the Torngat Mountains is 1050 m (Table V) based on three years for four glaciers. This mean conceals many variations in both time and space, yet coincides with the estimated elevation of the permanent snow line in the Torngat Mountains made by Reference IvesIves (1957). The lowest ELA was for Superguksoak Glacier in 1982 (860 m) while the highest was for Minaret Glacier in 1983 (1320 m), a difference of 460 m. Both of these glaciers had a rise in ELA of 110 m between 1982 and 1983. On the basis of ELA, 1982 was the best year overall for glacier accumulation, whilst 1983 was the best for ablation.
The ELA for Minaret Glacier is probably close to a “regional” ELA, while those for the other three, which are all quite similar, probably represent the effects of shading. On average they are c. 340 m lower than the ELA for Minaret Glacier. Using an approximate rate of ELA decline of 100 m per degree latitude, taken from Reference Sugden and JohnSugden and John (1976, Figure 5.5), the differences represent c 3.4 degrees of latitude, or >350 km. In general, the “shaded” ELAs are similar to those for the Cumberland Peninsula of Baffin Island (Reference Andrews and MillerAndrews and Miller, 1972), whilst the ELA for Minaret Glacier is substantially higher than any on Baffin Island. Shading may be the controlling factor in the survival of most Torngate Mountain glaciers.
Climatic Conditions
No climate stations were established on or near the glaciers during the mass-balance program. General conditions which prevailed during the summers can be ascertained from the analysis of daily field observations of weather, but are better obtained from the general record of Canadian monthly climate summaries (Table VI).
Mass-balance year 1981 began with a warm, snowy winter followed by a cool, wet spring and warm, dry summer. The early winter following was also warm and snowy but was followed by a cold spring in 1982 with a single wet month, April, and a summer which was average in both precipitation and temperature. The major differences between 1981 and 1982 were summer conditions and they resulted in a slightly less negative mass-balance regime in 1982. Mass-balance year 1983 began with a very cold and dry winter which culminated in a wet spring and temperatures far above normal in April, probably associated with rain. Summer 1983 was also average to wet and although June temperatures were above normal, the remainder of the summer was normal to slightly cooler than normal. Since 1983 was the largest negative year, the major differences between it and the others are winter precipitation and temperature, and possibly April temperature. Of these, winter precipitation is probably most important. High temperatures in March 1981, following a snowy winter, did not have the effect of high temperatures in April 1983, which followed a dry winter.
Departure from mean temperature for each mass-balance year is not a useful indicator of mass balance. The coldest year was 1983 (−1.5 deg departure) while the warmest was 1981 (+0.5 deg departure). Qualitative observations of snow conditions in July, even high in the accumulation basins of the glaciers, tend to confirm the view that winter precipitation is the controlling climatic variable in mass balance.
Conclusions
Mass balance for the Torngat Mountains glaciers is at present generally negative, averaging −0.26 m overall between 1981 and 1984. The two largest glaciers may experience positive mass balances up to +0.28 m when a climatically average summer follows a snowy winter. Mass balance does not appear to be inversely related to mean annual temperature.
Most glaciers of the Torngat Mountains have ELAs approximately 1000 m a.s.l. These are low for such a low latitude (59 °N. ), probably because the glaciers are overshadowed by high cirque backwalls which decrease summer melt. Minaret Glacier, with only minor shading, has an ELA approximately 340 m higher and its terminus is at approximately the same altitude as the highest and most shaded parts of the accumulation zones of the other glaciers.
Abraham Glacier is re-advancing up to 2.7 m in one year despite current negative mass balance. This must be in response to antecedent conditions which may have paralleled those reported from elsewhere in the eastern Arctic during the mid 1960s and through the 1970s. The other glaciers show no signs of re-advance or retreat.
The survival of glaciers in the Torngat Mountains seems likely for the immediate future even if climate improves slightly. Warmer temperatures in the winter could cause high snowfalls, as in January 1982 and 1983. Furthermore, even if higher temperatures caused much melt and substantially eroded the glaciers, any reduction in the surface elevation of the glaciers would increase the amount of shading and eventually depress the ELA even further.
Acknowledgements
The investigation of mass balance in the Torngat Mountains was supported by Natural Sciences Engineering Research Council of Canada operating grants A 6105 for 4 years, and in 1981 by a small contract with the Snow and Ice Division of Environment Canada. The Northern Scientific Training grants supported a number of students to work on the glaciers, and the Newfoundland Department of Mines and Energy and PetroCanada Explorations provided valuable support in transportation and communications. Assistants who worked long and hard in the field were M. Olson, E. Guy (1981), H. Russell (1982 and 1983), T. Kelliher (1982), D. Branson (1983), L. St. Croix (1983 and 1984), L. Davis and C. Garrity (1984). S. Halliday drafted the diagrams.
MS. received 3 September 1985