During the summer of 1967, a small ice-dammed lake on the west side of Casement Glacier, Glacier Bay, Alaska, was investigated in an effort to ascertain the mechanism of self-drainage. The lake is formed in a steep-walled, ice-free tributary valley, blocked by lower Casement Glacier. This study is a continuation of the earlier work of Reference LindsayLindsay (1966). A comparison between his observations taken in 1965 and the writer’s in 1967 reveals some important variations in the behaviour of the lake following its initial outburst.
As shown in Figure 1, in 1965 the initial discharge occurred on 8 July when the lake level fell 36 m. A period of stability set in subsequently until 29 July. The lake level fell slowly from 29 July until 5 August, when a second rapid discharge occurred. The lake was nearly emptied by this event and it continued to drop slowly, reaching its lowest point on 25 August. At an unknown time after the latter date, however, the ice-dammed basin began to refill. When observed for the final time on 8 November, the water surface was only 7 m below its highest level in July (Reference LindsayLindsay, 1966).
In 1967, the first sudden discharge of the lake occurred on 22 July, exactly 2 weeks later in the summer than in 1965. The lake level dropped 31.92 m but approximately 35 m of water still remained. As in 1965, the lake stabilized at its post-outburst level, displaying only minor fluctuations for the next 2 weeks or so. On 9 August, the water level began to drop again but this time at a gradual rate (Fig. 2). A second rapid discharge never did come to pass in 1967—thus, an important contrast with 1965. The final observation, on 10 September, revealed only a few meters of water remaining in the glacier-blocked basin. A delta at the head of the lake was exposed and numerous large chunks of ice had been left stranded on newly emerged lake terraces. It is not known if complete drainage ever occurred before the onset of freezing winter temperatures.
Drainage Mechanism
The drainage mechanism of glacier-dammed lakes is not wholly understood. The writer favors the dam-flotation hypothesis first suggested by Reference ThorarinssonThorarinsson (1939) as the most plausible explanation for the periodic emptying of Casement Glacier Lake, as did Reference PetersonPeterson (unpublished) and Reference LindsayLindsay (1966). Thorarinsson suggested that the water level of an ice-dammed lake rises until it attains nine-tenths of the height of the retaining ice barrier; further rise results in flotation of the dam, thereby permitting the water to gain egress subglacially. This is indeed what apparently happened during the summers of 1965, 1966 and 1967. In each instance the water was well above the required level. This hypothesis, however, fails to account for the second outburst of 1965 when the water line was far below the required level; further, it does not explain the steady but gradual drainage which occurred during the post-outburst period of 1967. Moreover, the writer has been unable to account for the differences in the behaviour of the lake between 1965 and 1967. Thus, major problems concerning the drainage mechanism of ice-dammed lakes remain unsolved.
Acknowledgements
The writer wishes to express thanks to Dr Colin Bull, Dean of the College of Mathematics and Physical Sciences, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, for his critical reading of the manuscript. This study was undertaken as part of the field work on Casement Glacier supported by the United States Atomic Energy Commission Project AT (11-1)-1473 (Ohio State University Research Foundation Project No. 2017-A).