Introduction
The central part of Chile (32–36˚ S) is characterized by a Mediterranean climate, with mild wet winters and dry summers. The summers are semi-permanently affected by the blocking of a high-pressure cell over the southeast Pacific Ocean, while during the winter (mainly concentrated between May and September) the westerlies can reach this region and generate frontal and orographic precipitation (Rütllant and Fuenzalida, 1991). The precipitation at high altitudes (above 2500ma.s.l.) fluctuates between <500mm in the northern semi-arid part, to up to 2500 mma–1 at 36˚ S. The 0˚C isotherm altitude decreases in the same latitudinal range, from about 4000ma.s.l. at 32˚ S to <3000ma.s.l. at 36˚ S (Reference Carrasco, Casassa and QuintanaCarrasco and others, 2005). This allows the presence of an important glacier area in the mountains of this region (Reference Rivera, Casassa, Acuña and LangeRivera and others, 2000). The variations of the snowline since 1975 showed a midtropospheric warming with an elevation increase of the 0˚C isotherm of 122 ±8m in winter, and 200±6m in summer (Reference Carrasco, Casassa and QuintanaCarrasco and others, 2005). During the same period, the occurrence of several El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) events has directly affected water runoff (Reference ValdiviaWaylen and Caviedes, 1990) and the glacier mass balances. This has been systematically observed at Glaciar Echaurren Norte (33˚35' S), where positive mass-balance years are measured during El Niño years, while negative mass balances have been observed during La Niña events (Reference Escobar, Casassa and PozoEscobar and others, 1995). As a result of these changes, glaciers have been recognized as key factors contributing to late-summer runoff in many of the main river basins, especially during summers of years with severe drought (like 1968) when up to 67% of the water flow was generated by glacier meltwater (Reference Peña and NazaralaPeña and Nazarala, 1987). More recent studies have recognized the role of snowmelt as a key factor in explaining runoff variability from this part of the country (Reference Masiokas, Villalba, Luckman, Le Quesne and AravenaMasiokas and others, 2006). Considering the changes in precipitation that have taken place in this region (a general decrease up to 1976, followed by a slight increase afterwards, north of 34˚ S), the water resources of central Chile have been under pressure during recent decades. This is due to high competition for water allocation as a result of rapid economic growth (Reference Rosegrant, Ringler, McKinney, Cai, Keller and DonosoRosegrant and others, 2000). Also, the availability of these resources has been stressed by higher interannual variability of the weather system (mainly associated with ENSO events) and reduction of the glacier areas (Reference Rivera, Acuña, Casassa and KnightRivera and others, 2006).
Despite being near Santiago, the most populated area of Chile, this glaciological region has been poorly studied. Apart from the pioneering work of Reference LliboutryLliboutry (1956), only a few studies have taken place on the Chilean side of the Andes. These include glacier inventories which estimate a total glacier area of >1000 km2 (Reference MarangunicMarangunic, 1979; Reference Schneider, Schnirch, Acuña, Casassa and KilianValdivia, 1984; J. Caviedes, unpublished information; C. Noveroy, unpublished information). These inventories are based upon old aerial photographs and sometimes inaccurate maps. Other glaciological studies carried out in this region include energy-balance (Reference Corripio, Purves, De Jong, Collins and RanziCorripio and Purves, 2005) and ice-thickness (Reference Rivera, Casassa and AcuñaRivera and others, 2001) measurements, rock glacier studies (Reference BrenningBrenning, 2005) and, for the first time in the Chilean Andes, extraction of a 5.5 m long firn/ice core drilled from the summit (5300ma.s.l.) of Cerro El Plomo (Reference Bolius, Schwikowski, Jenk, Gäggeler, Casassa and RiveraBolius and others, 2006).
Methodology
Data
Remotely sensed data used in this study are shown in Table 1, including photogrammetrically derived regular cartography produced by Instituto Geográfico Militar (IGM) based upon the 1955 Hycon aerial survey. The topographic map covers the whole basin area (Fig. 1) at a 1 : 50 000 nominal scale and a contour interval of 50 m. In terms of the American Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, this is Classified I regular cartography, which has an error estimated at one-third of the contour-line interval according to Reference FalknerFalkner (1995), i.e. 17 m. In 1997, Servicio Aerofotogramétrico de Chile updated this former aerial survey at 1 : 50 000 nominal scale based upon the Geotec photographs.
Several high-resolution, cloud-free satellite images have been used for mapping glacier extent in the basin, including Landsat Thematic Mapper (TM) and Enhanced TM Plus (ETM+), and more recently Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) visible imagery. All images have been georeferenced to the available Instituto Geográfico Militar (IGM) cartography and orthorectified using Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) data, following procedures described by, among others, Reference KääbKääb and others (2003).
*IGM: Instituto Geográfico Militar, Chile; GLCF: Global Land Cover Facility; SAF: Servicio Aerofotogramétrico, Chile; JPL: Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, USA; GLIMS: Global Land Ice Measurements from Space.
Interpretation of satellite imagery
Once the satellite images were georeferenced and orthorectified, a classification procedure was applied to account for the glacier extent and snow/ice/debris identification. A histogram analysis of the Landsat TM and ETM+ images was performed, after which segmentation of the ratio of Landsat bands 4 and 5 was used to obtain the best possible glacier classification (Reference Paul, Kääb, Maisch, Kellenberger and HaeberliPaul and others, 2002). A similar method was applied to ASTER data, using bands 3N and 4. The determination of the variation of glacier fronts was achieved through both stereoscopic analyses of vertical aerial photographs and analyses of satellite imagery. The information obtained from aerial photographs was transferred with a Zoom Transfer Scope (ZTS) to the regular cartography, with ice fronts being digitally compared to the satellite images. All glacier limits were analyzed using commercial Geographical Information System (GIS) software, such as IDRISI 32 for Windows, ArcInfo version 8.0.1 and PCI Geomatica, which allowed for an accurate estimation of area and frontal changes. An ASTER mosaic was generated from two consecutive scenes acquired on the same date in 2003 (Table 1) which covered the whole basin (Fig. 2). This allowed updating of the complete glacier inventory of the basin.
Analysis of ice elevation data
1955 IGM topography and 2000 SRTM data have been compared in order to compute the elevation changes at the lower surface of Glaciar Juncal Norte (last 1000 m), which terminates in a long and narrow, partially debris-covered ice tongue. A Boolean mask and 90m spatial resolution were selected to account for changes using GIS software.
Apart from these results, other surface data derive from field campaigns since 1999 as part of a glaciology seminar school at the University of Chile. In February 2003 (mid-ablation season), H. Lange and others (unpublished information) reported the use of geodetic-quality GPS receivers (Trimble Pathfinder) to profile the surface topography of the lower section of the glacier and estimate ice elevation changes. Data acquisition was carried out on a ‘stop-and-go’ kinematic GPS traverse over the surface, recording several static points and a kinematic route at a constant repetition rate with vertical accuracies on the order of 5 m.
Results
Glacier inventory
The calculated glaciated area of Aconcagua for 2003 is 121.2 km2, distributed across a total of 159 glaciers (Table 2). The Andean range reaches elevations higher than 6100ma.s.l. at this latitude, with glaciers extending from these highest points down to a minimum of ~3000ma.s.l., within five main river sub-basins: Rocín, Colorado, Riecillos, Juncal and Blanco.
The number of glaciers and ice areas per sub-basin have been organized by rank sizes (Table 2) according to the standard classification of the World Glacier Inventory in Zürich, Switzerland (Reference Müller, Caflisch and MüllerMüller and others, 1977). The smallest rank, between 0.1 and 0.99 km2, is the most frequent.
One of the most important glaciers in this Andean basin is Glaciar Juncal Norte (Fig. 2; 7.6 km2), which descends northward from ‘Nevado del Juncal’. A number of studies have been carried out there in recent decades, partly thanks to the accessibility of its ablation area and logistics support provided by the Chilean Army. Measurements include recent variations of the glacier (frontal, areal), ice velocities and the surface energy balances (Reference Rivera, Casassa, Acuña and LangeRivera and others, 2000; Reference Pellicciotti, Burlando and van VlietPellicciotti and others, 2007).
Further south is Glaciar del Río Blanco, the only glacier classified in rank 4. This glacier is in a compound basin formed by several accumulation zones and a common debris-covered ablation area draining to Río Blanco (Fig. 2), and has a total surface area of 24.3 km2. Despite this, there is a noticeable lack of glaciers in rank 4 in the previous inventory by Reference Schneider, Schnirch, Acuña, Casassa and KilianValdivia (1984), even though this older inventory is reported to be superior in terms of net surface area and number of glaciers. The glaciers forming Glaciar del Río Blanco are mostly smaller than 10 km2, so we hypothesize that they were accounted separately and classified under rank 3 by Reference Schneider, Schnirch, Acuña, Casassa and KilianValdivia (1984). This could be explained partly by stereo matching problems during the photogrammetrical restitution when these glaciers were mapped.
In relation to the aspect of glaciers, they are exposed predominantly to the south-southwestern flank of the valleys (nearly 50% of all inventoried glaciers), so they receive large amounts of oceanic moisture and westerly winds. This is the major source for solid precipitation in the accumulation zones along central Chile (Reference Escobar and AceitunoEscobar and Aceituno, 1998). The percentage of glaciers exposed to the south, however, is less in other areas such as the Juncal sub-basin, where there are several larger glaciers (~40% of the basin ice surface) with northern aspects and drier conditions prevail. Another spatial feature is the distribution of debris-covered areas along the basin; roughly the northern half is characterized by smaller glaciers which are mostly (in Río Riecillos, 76% of the total) ice-covered, whereas the southern half consists of more debris-covered glaciers (Table 3).
Glacier variations
By comparing the most recent inventory with the previous study conducted by Reference Schneider, Schnirch, Acuña, Casassa and KilianValdivia (1984), we find a total glacier area reduction between 1955 and 2003 of 30 km2, equivalent to an annual rate of change of –0.6km2 a–1. In absolute terms, this reduction is explained by the decrease of larger surfaces; glaciers ranked 2 (Table 2) have lost 18.3 km2, and when those ranked 3 and 4 are compared to glaciers of rank 3 as provided by Reference Schneider, Schnirch, Acuña, Casassa and KilianValdivia (1984), they have collectively reduced in area by 9.4 km2. However, the smaller glaciers have been proportionally more affected because they have experienced an area reduction of >60%, and a reduction in their number from 55 to 24. This means a disappearance of 66% of the original smaller glaciers.
Glaciar Juncal Norte is the glacier with the longest documentary record and field data in the Aconcagua river basin, having been first described in 1942 by O. Pfenniger in Reference LliboutryLliboutry (1956). Subsequently, several hydroclimate and glaciological studies have been carried out there (Reference Rivera, Casassa, Acuña and LangeRivera and others, 2000, Reference Rivera, Acuña, Casassa and Bown2002; Pellicciotti and others, in press). This glacier has suffered a constant retreat at low rates of 4– 23 ma–1 (Table 4). The retreat has mainly affected the partially debris-covered front and surroundings of the 2 km long, 500m wide and 186m thick lower tongue of the glacier (Reference Rivera, Casassa and AcuñaRivera and others, 2001). The total glacier area loss between 1955 and 2006 is 1.5 km2 (Table 4). This is much more than the previous estimation by Reference Rivera, Acuña, Casassa and BownRivera and others (2002). One explanation could be that the latest calculation considers the changes taking place all around the glacier, i.e. it includes the upper accumulation area where the glacier is also shrinking (Fig. 3). Frontal variations in recent decades are small in comparison with other retreating glaciers in northern and central Chile (e.g. the observed changes at Glaciar Juncal Sur, with frontal retreats higher than 50 ma–1 in a similar period of time (Reference Rivera, Casassa, Acuña and LangeRivera and others, 2000, Reference Rivera, Acuña, Casassa and Bown2002)). This smaller retreat rate could also be related to topographic constraints at Juncal Norte, where the position of the glacier snout at the bottom of a deep valley surrounded by high mountains is continuously shadowing the ice.
Ice-elevation changes at the lower part of the glacier were computed by subtraction between SRTM 2000 and the IGM cartographically derived digital elevation model (1955). The signal remains well below the noise ratio, which comprises the combined root mean square (rms) of the IGM map (17 m) and the SRTM data (12 m). Therefore, no significant trend can be detected by comparing the two datasets. However, the GPS profile reported in H. Lange and others (unpublished information), i.e. the ice surface between 2925 and 3096ma.s.l. (1000m long traverse), as compared to IGM cartography, accounted for an annual thinning rate of 0.58± 0.37ma–1 during the 48 year period. At higher altitudes, there are GPS data accounting for further negative elevation changes; nevertheless they remain well below the rms error (H. Lange and others, unpublished information).
Discussion
Aconcagua is one of the main glaciated basins in central Chile (Reference Rivera, Casassa, Acuña and LangeRivera and others, 2000). Other important glaciated basins in this region are Maipo (33˚S), Cachapoal (34˚ S) and Tinguririca (35˚ S), although no updating of the old ice inventories has been carried out yet for the rivers south of Aconcagua. Taking into account the information available to date, this basin represents 14% of the total ice area between 32˚ and 35˚ S. If the 20% area loss experienced by the Aconcagua river during the past five decades (1955–2006) is applied over a similar period of time to the other basins of central Chile, the regional total loss may be >200km2 of ice. Within Chile, this large retreat is only comparable to what has been experienced by the icefields south of 53˚ S (Reference Porter and SantanaPorter and Santana, 2003; Reference Möller, Schneider and KilianMöller and others, 2007; Reference Rüxtllant and FuenzalidaSchneider and others, 2007), or in other parts of South America, by Andean tropical glaciers (Reference PouyaudPouyaud and others, 2005). Even in Patagonia, the changes are proportionally much smaller, with area reductions of 3–4% in Hielo Patagónico Norte and Sur (northern and southern Patagonia icefields) respectively (Reference Aniya, Sato, Naruse, Skvarca and CasassaAniya and others, 1996; Reference Rivera, Benham, Casassa, Bamber and DowdeswellRivera and others, 2007).
The glaciers in the Aconcagua basin seem to be responding to climate change detected in the meteorological network (Reference Rosenblüth, Fuenzalida and AceitunoRosenblüth and others, 1997; Reference QuintanaQuintana, 2004). The most likely driving factor is the tropospheric warming observed in radiosonde records, especially between 850 and 500 hPa (Reference Carrasco, Casassa and QuintanaCarrasco and others, 2005). This may explain the glacier frontal retreats, ice surface reduction and thinning (Reference Rivera, Acuña, Casassa and BownRivera and others, 2002), since the amount of precipitation (in the form of snow reaching the surface), or ice melting in the ablation areas, is affected by atmospheric changes. In addition, the occurrence of ENSO phenomena plays an important role in controlling snowfall at this latitude – including consequences for runoff trends – with some negative implications for glaciers in the most extreme La Niña years and clear and significant positive effects during almost all recent El Niño years (Reference Escobar, Casassa and PozoEscobar and others, 1995; Reference Rivera, Casassa, Acuña and LangeRivera and others, 2000; Reference Masiokas, Villalba, Luckman, Le Quesne and AravenaMasiokas and others, 2006).
Factors other than climate, such as complex valley geometry, aspect or debris cover, may disrupt linear glacier responses to increasing temperature or decreasing precipitation. Whereas debris cover has not prevented the disappearance of smaller glaciers, in other cases local characteristics may have attenuated the glaciological effects of ongoing climate change. Juncal Norte is a good example of these local factors.
Conclusions
Glacier changes in central Chile may have a strong impact on present and future water resources due to the increasing competition among users as a result of the economic growth experienced by the country in recent decades (Reference Rosegrant, Ringler, McKinney, Cai, Keller and DonosoRosegrant and others, 2000). The glacier contribution has been recognized to be crucial, particularly in periods of drought or very dry summers, when it has been observed that up to 67% of the total runoff may originate from the melting of glaciers (Reference Peña and NazaralaPeña and Nazarala, 1987).
The Aconcagua river constitutes an important glaciated basin in the boundary zone between semi-arid and temperate conditions. It supports many economic activities and a large part of the national population. Glaciers in this basin have been shown to be responding to climate change, and in particular to the elevation of the zero degree isotherm (Reference Carrasco, Casassa and QuintanaCarrasco and others, 2005), with area losses, frontal retreats and surface ice thinning. Specific glacier responses may be explained by local factors, but they also suggest the use of more accurate methods other than remote sensing in order to detect glacier variations. Geophysical field surveys and/or aircraft-borne measurements are required. The trend to decreasing runoff observed in the Aconcagua river (Pellicciotti and others, in press) can largely be explained by a reduced contribution of glaciers and snow.
The current trend to reduced runoff will continue in the future if the climatic warming patterns continue, and overall glacier mass will be further reduced. Many small glaciers will probably disappear, contributing less water to the rivers. In the tropical Andes, for example, small glaciers are already disappearing (Reference Coudrain, Francou and KundzewiczCoudrain and others, 2005) and hydrological models are forecasting a significant decay in water storages over the next few decades (Reference PouyaudPouyaud and others, 2005).
Further knowledge and research will be necessary to improve insights into future glacier trends in this region and implications for water resource availability.
Acknowledgements
This work is sponsored by Centro de Estudios Científicos, Chile (CECS). CECS is funded by a grant from the Millennium Science Initiative and the Regional Center on Innovative Technology, among others. We thank the Comision Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica y Technologica de Chile (CONICYT) for travel assistance under grant ACI-04. This research used satellite images provided by the Global Land Ice Measurements from Space (GLIMS) project and the Global Land Cover Facility at the University of Maryland, USA. We thank L. Copland for revising our English.