Publication | Closed Access
A glacial lake outburst flood associated with recent mountain glacier retreat, Patagonian Andes
106
Citations
33
References
2006
Year
GlacierVolcanologyEngineeringGeomorphologyGlacial ProcessEarth SciencePaleoenvironmental ChangePleistoceneGeochronologyPatagonian AndesGlaciologyGeographyGeologyCryosphereTerminal MoraineSedimentologyTectonicsMoraine DevelopmentLaharGlacier RecessionOrogenyFlood Risk ManagementQuaternary PeriodMountain Uplift
Geomorphological mapping, sedimentology, lichenometry and dendrochronology were used to assess the nature and timing of glacier recession, moraine development and catastrophic mass movements in a tributary of the Leones valley, east of the Hielo Patagónico Norte, Chile. We show that during the 'Little Ice Age' Glaciar Calafate advanced downvalley to produce a terminal moraine. Recession of the glacier from this position occurred in the 1 870s and produced a moraine dammed lake. In late 2000 a large rockfall into the lake breached the moraine and triggered a glacial lake outburst flood (GLOF) that entrained and subsequently deposited some 2 x 106 m 3 of material. We interpret this event as a delayed paraglacial response to the retreat of Glaciar Calafate during the twentieth century.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1