Introduction
Results of a multi-annual field program of glacier and climate monitoring on Mount Kenya have been presented in a series of articles in this and other journals (Reference HastenrathHastenrath, 1975; Reference Caukwell and HastenrathCaukwell and Hastenrath, 1977, Reference Caukwell and Hastenrath1982; Reference Hastenrath and CaukwellHastenrath and Caukwell, 1979; Reference Hastenrath and KrussHastenrath and Kruss, [1981], Reference Hastenrath and Kruss1982; Reference Hastenrath and PatnaikHastenrath and Patnaik, 1980; Reference BhattBhatt and others [1982]; Reference Thompson and HastenrathThompson and Hastenrath, [1982]; Reference Kruss and HastenrathKruss and Hastenrath, 1983). The monitoring program reached an important juncture in March 1982, when net balance and precipitation measurements made continuous over four mass-budget years were brought to a conclusion, an airborne mapping was carried out to match the chart obtained for the beginning of that four-year interval, and renewed electronic distance measurement (EDM) surveys of the stake network yielded further velocity determinations.
This ensemble of observations together with our earlier determination of ice thickness and bedrock topography (Reference BhattBhatt and others, [1982]), allows the consideration in context of the net balance derived from the stake network, the surface lowering documented by the airborne mappings at the beginning and end of the four-year period, and the ice flow pattern in the interior of the glacier as deduced from surface observations, as well as the issue of representative residence times of ice in Lewis Glacier. Results pertinent to this problem complex are discussed in the present paper.
Observations
Components of the field program have been described before in various sources (Reference Hastenrath and CaukwellHastenrath and Caukwell, 1979; Reference Hastenrath and KrussHastenrath and Kruss, [1981]; Reference BhattBhatt and others, [1982]; Reference Caukwell and HastenrathCaukwell and Hastenrath, 1982), so that this summary is limited to the information relevant to the present study.
Figure 1 shows the network of stakes installed in January 1978 for both net balance measurements and velocity determinations. Also included is the central line used as reference in various of our earlier studies. (This is adopted as the longitudinal axis in the longitudinal–vertical cross-sections of Figures 4 and 5.) Stakes in the vicinity of this central line are of primary interest in the present study.
Height changes of the glacier surface with respect to a fixed mark on the stakes are available for the complete four-year interval at some, but not all stations (this distribution being apparent from Figs 4 and 5). Height changes are commonly converted into liquid water equivalent net balance, but the unconverted quantities are of interest here. Figure 2 is a contour map of height changes observed at the stake network.
The horizontal and absolute vertical coordinates of the footpoint of stakes were determined during the various surveys using EDM equipment. Displacement over the entire four-year period is available for some, but not all, stations as indentified in Figures 4 and 5.
Airborne mappings of the ice surface topography at scale 1:2 500 were produced for February 1978 and March 1982 (Reference Hastenrath and CaukwellHastenrath and Caukwell, 1979; Reference Caukwell and HastenrathCaukwell and Hastenrath, 1982). A comparison of these maps yields the chart of observed change in ice thickness over the four-year interval (Fig. 3).
Use is further made of the ice thickness and bedrock determinations reported in Bhatt and others, (1980). This forms the basis for the longitudinal bedrock profile sketched in Figures 4 and 5.
Flow pattern
Maps have been published of the horizontal flow component at the surface of Lewis Glacier for various temporal intervals since January 1978 (Reference Hastenrath and KrussHastenrath and Kruss [1981], Reference Hastenrath and Kruss1982; Reference Kruss and HastenrathKruss and Hastenrath, 1983). These maps indicate that the line chosen to be the longitudinal axis as shown in Figure 1 represents the central flow line reasonably well. In this present paper both the horizontal and vertical flow components are considered, but are limited to the central line (Fig. 1) so that conditions are presented in the longitudinal–vertical plane.
Whereas the earlier papers (Reference Hastenrath and KrussHastenrath and Kruss, [1981], Reference Hastenrath and Kruss1982; Reference Kruss and HastenrathKruss and Hastenrath, 1983) concentrated on the horizontal velocity pattern at the surface, the vertical component of surface velocity is of particular interest in relation to the vertical net balance profile. This can be determined through the procedure described by Reference PatersonPaterson (1969, p. 65–68) for the central flow line. The various EDM surveys (see previous section) provide the horizontal and vertical coordinates of the foot point of net balance stakes for the datum 25–26 January 1982. Moreover, the distance from a reference mark on the stake to the glacier surface is available from the net balance measurements. Thus, the vertical and horizontal displacement rates of the reference mark in an absolute coordinate system can be calculated. Let Δz and Δs denote the displacement of the stake mark in the vertical and horizontal directions, respectively, along the central line (Figs 1, 4, and 5), during the time interval Δt, with tan α the surface slope. Then the vertical component of surface flow counted positive downward is
and the horizontal component of surface flow in the plane described by the central line is
The vertical and horizontal surface flow components were calculated for the net balance stakes located near the central line. For stakes 3, 10, 11, 31, and 43 evaluation was possible for the four-year period 25–29 January 1978 to 25–26 January 1982. For stakes 21, 32, 41, and 42 calculations were limited to the two-year interval 26–27 December 1979 to 29–30 December 1981, and for stake 1 to the one-year period 25–29 January 1978 to December 1978–5 January 1979.
The resultant surface flow velocity in the longitudinal–vertical plane is depicted in Figure 4A. The flow vector is directed downward in the upper glacier and upward in the lower glacier. This feature is enhanced in Figure 4B, which is further relevant to the relationship between net balance, surface lowering, and flow dynamics discussed later (p. 400).
Although velocity measurements are as a rule limited to the surface, it is desirable to obtain a notion of the ice flow pattern in the interior of the glacier. This is illustrated in Figure 5 which was constructed as follows from the information contained in Figure 4A. The surface velocity vectors are decomposed into components parallel and perpendicular to the surface. The velocity component perpendicular to the surface is assumed to decrease in a linear fashion perpendicularly away from the surface to zero at the bedrock. Concerning the velocity component V parallel to the surface, the decrease in the direction perpendicular to the surface is described by
where the subscripts s and z refer to the surface and a perpendicular distance z from the surface towards the bedrock (Reference BuddBudd, 1969, p. 193; Reference BhattBhatt and others, [1982]). For k and n the values of 0.16 bar−2 a−1 and 2 respectively are used as in Reference BhattBhatt and others ([1982]). For the stress shape factor s, values of 0.9 and 0.8 are adopted for the upper (>4 750 m) and lower glacier, respectively. The values for ice density ρ and gravitational acceleration g are 0.9 × 103 kg m−3 and 9.806 m s−2. The surface slope tan α is read from the 1:2 500 map of surface topography (Reference Hastenrath and CaukwellHastenrath and Caukwell, 1979; see also Fig. 1). At each of the ten stations shown in Figures 4 and 5 the velocity components perpendicular and parallel to the surface were thus calculated for points at 0.25, 0.50, and 0.75 of the distance measured perpendicularly from the surface to bedrock. The resultant vectors are plotted in Figure 5 by direction and amount, together with the isotach pattern in the longitudinal–vertical plane.
As a complement to Figure 4, the longitudinal–vertical cross-section in Figure 5 shows the submergent flow in the upper and the emergent flow in the interior of the lower glacier, as well as the onion-skin arrangement of isotach sheets, with lowest values near bedrock and in the upper glacier, and a maximum near the surface in a portion of the lower glacier well above the terminus. This conceptually plausible flow pattern in the glacier interior (Paterson, 1965, p. 65) has seldom been quantitatively substantiated from observation, and never before for a glacier in the high mountains of the tropics.
Figure 5 is also pertinent to the age of ice within Lewis Glacier. Estimates of representative residence times are desired in relation to the secular glacier recession (Reference HastenrathHastenrath, 1975) and in support of climatic ice-core studies (Reference Thompson and HastenrathThompson and Hastenrath, [1982]). With this motivation, a “bulk residence time” of ice in the upper glacier was first calculated by dividing the ice volume upward of the line L2–L3 near 4 750 m (Fig. 1) by the estimated mass flux across a vertical plane at that line, which yielded a value of about 150 years (Reference HastenrathHastenrath, 1975). The comprehensive field program carried out on Lewis Glacier since the beginning of 1978 permits an update of this exercise. For the datum February 1978, the ice volume upward of the 4 750 m contour is estimated at about 3 × 106 m3 (Reference BhattBhatt and others, [1982]). The maximum mass flux of 3 × 104 m3 a−1 is found at about this elevation (Reference Hastenrath and KrussHastenrath and Kruss, [1981], Reference Hastenrath and Kruss1982; Reference Kruss and HastenrathKruss and Hastenrath, 1983). The ratio yields a “bulk residence time” in the upper glacier (>4 750 m) of about 100 years.
As a complement to these bulk considerations, Figure 5 offers a better appreciation of trajectories and age of ice in the interior of Lewis Glacier. For the following evaluation assume near steady-state conditions, so that trajectories coincide approximately with streamlines. As a first example, consider an ice element at an initial surface location near 300 m on the longitudinal axis, or somewhat above station 4. The trajectory for this ice element is characterized by submergence, a closest proximity to the bedrock between 400 and 500 m (around station 10), then emergence and a surfacing near 600 m or somewhat above station 31. Integration by finite steps between isotachs yields a total travel time from the initial location to the final surfacing location which is of the order of a century. As a second example, consider an ice element in an initial surface location at 125 m on the longitudinal axis, or somewhat above station 3. Over its trajectory in the upper glacier the element submerges, coming closest to the bedrock around 400 m on the longitudinal axis. The longitudinal coordinate of 500 m, which corresponds approximately to the 4 750 m surface contour, is reached after nearly four centuries. The trajectory surfaces below the longitudinal coordinate of 700 m or near station 33, with a total travel time of four to five centuries.
The travel time from a surface location in the uppermost extremity of the glacier to the 4 750 m surface contour of nearly four centuries should be compared with the “bulk residence time” for ice in the upper glacier which is of the order of one century as estimated above. Note that for the ice elements located at the surface along the longitudinal axis, the travel time would average around two centuries (being four centuries for the upper extremity of the glacier and zero at the 4 750 m surface contour). Moreover, the ice flows faster along the centerline than to either side of it. With these qualifications, the travel time derived from Figure 5 and the estimate of “bulk residence time” do not seem inconsistent.
The above considerations also point to the inevitable shortcomings of residence time calculations. Lewis Glacier is not in steady state, so that flow lines differ from trajectories Furthermore, at earlier epochs in this century, the glacier was longer and thicker, so that the travel distance from the upper extremity of the glacier to the snout region was longer, but the faster flow had the reverse effect on the travel time. Finally, the time scale of climate and glacier variations is comparable with or smaller than the range of typical residence times. All these factors hamper the estimation of residence time from flow considerations.
Mass continuity
The maps of 1978–82 height change measured with respect to the stake network (Fig. 2) and of topography change documented from the repeated airborne mappings (Fig. 3) show differentials of similar magnitude and largest negative values in the lower glacier, but the patterns differ in detail. This is in part due to the spatial resolution of the stake network, but in part to the redistribution of mass related to the flow dynamics. The latter factor is also indicated in Table I, in that for most of the upper glacier the height decrease H m derived from the 1978 and 1982 mappings is larger than that obtained from the stake network, H sa, whilst the reverse is true for the lower glacier. For the glacier as a whole the two independent techniques yield thickness or volume decreases which agree closely within plausible error tolerances. The close agreement between the two independent methods indicates that melting at depth greater than the lowest surface elevation respective to the stake, in the course of the year, is of subordinate importance.
The relationship between surface lowering, net balance, and flow dynamics suggested from the comparison of maps (Figs 2 and 3) and Table I, is in terms of the pertinent processes substantiated in Figure 4, especially part B. The vertical component of ice flow at the surface is downward in the upper (upward in the lower) glacier. This corresponds to surface velocity vectors plotted in the longitudinal—vertical cross section in part A of Figure 4. Returning to part B of Figure 4, net balance over the four-year interval 1978–82 is negative at all elevations along the longitudinal axis, with losses increasing towards the lower glacier. The sum of these two quantities, but expressed as geometric distance rather than in liquid-water-equivalent units, is expected to represent the change in surface topography over the four-year interval 1978–82. The available data allowed this evaluation for five of the stations. These calculations should be compared with the observed surface lowering, as documented by the 1978 and 1982 mappings of the glacier topography. The two independent approaches agree in major respects: (a) negative values are obtained at all stations, with surface lowering increasing from the upper towards the lower glacier; (b) the surface lowering exceeds the negative net balance in the upper, but is less than the net balance effect in the lower glacier, thus demonstrating the role of vertical velocity, and mass redistribution through flow dynamics. The values of surface lowering obtained by the two independent methods differ, which may in part be due to the error tolerances in field measurements and evaluation procedures. However, it is apparent from part B of Figure 4 that in the upper glacier the surface lowering calculated from vertical flow velocity and net balance slightly exceeds the value documented by the 1978 and 1982 mappings, whereas the reverse is the case in the lower glacier. These systematic departures may be due to the fact that the flow is confluent in the upper glacier where its bed narrows down-stream, whilst in the lower glacier diffluence is favored both by the widening of the valley and the upward-convex bedrock topography apparent in the central portion of the snout region. Part B of Figure 5 thus underlines the important role of flow dynamics and mass redistribution in modulating the effect of net balance on surface topography.
Conclusions
The observation program provides a quantitative picture of submergent ice flow in the upper and emergent ice in the lower glacier of the order of 1–2 m a−1, and allows an estimate of a few centuries for the representative residence time of ice in Lewis Glacier. The “glaciological” (stake) and “geodetic” methods (Reference HoinkesHoinkes, 1970) yield within error tolerance the same magnitude of about 106 m3 for the ice loss of the glacier as a whole over the interval 1974–78. However, the reported mappings of surface topography document for the upper (lower) glacier a larger (smaller) surface lowering than expected from the stake network. This contrast between the upper and lower glacier is consistent with the quantitative assessment of the vertical motion field.
Consistency between internal flow conditions and the “glaciological” (stake) and “geodetic” methods of glacier mass-budget determination (Reference HoinkesHoinkes, 1970) is expected from theory, but the concurrent application of these independent techniques has rarely been accomplished, even for the logistically comfortable mountain regions of the mid-latitudes. It is intended to continue the long-term observation program on this mountain glacier under the Equator as a contribution to international efforts at global environment monitoring.
Acknowledgments
This study was supported through U.S. National Science Foundation Grant EAR79–23897. The United Nations Environment Programme supported the Expedition in 1981/82, which brought four years of continuous glacier and climate monitoring to an interim fruition. Conversations with the late Herfried Hoinkes and with Phillip Kruss are gratefully acknowledged. The research is authorized by the Office of the President, Republic of Kenya.