Debris-covered glaciers may host several biological forms that colonize the debris cover, especially if the glacier tongue reaches sufficiently low altitudes (down to about 1700 m a.s.l. at Miage Glacier, Western Italian Alps) thus allowing also tree growth. Supraglacial trees colonizing the debris-covered tongue are strongly influenced in growth and distribution by substrate characteristics and instability. The tree age distribution at Miage Glacier presents a positive gradient towards the glacier terminus, which was found to be related to the decreasing glacier surface velocity. By analysing tree-ring growth anomalies on the glacier and at a control site at the tree line over the 20-year period 1987-2006, it was found that trees growing on the glacier presented the highest percentages of abrupt growth changes (AGCs)>+70% with respect to the four previous years. Considering tree displacement on the glacier surface over the same 20-year period and the recorded AGCs, it was found that the central-lower portion of the southern lobe towards the margins was the most unstable. The temporal analysis of AGC>+40% confirmed a period of higher glacier surface instability, reaching a maximum in the years 1988 (on lobe S) and 1989 (on lobe N), probably related to the passage of a kinematic wave in the glacier tongue. Our analysis suggests that supraglacial trees hold useful information on the glacier tongue dynamics and that both AGC>+70% and AGC>+40% may be used as a proxy for substrate instability in spatio-temporal reconstructions in the Alpine environment.

Past surface instability of Miage debris-covered glacier tongue (Mont Blanc Massif, Italy): a decadal-scale tree-ring-based reconstruction / G. LEONELLI, M. PELFINI. - In: BOREAS. - ISSN 0300-9483. - 42:3(2013), pp. 613-622.

Past surface instability of Miage debris-covered glacier tongue (Mont Blanc Massif, Italy): a decadal-scale tree-ring-based reconstruction

G. LEONELLI
Primo
;
M. PELFINI
Ultimo
2013

Abstract

Debris-covered glaciers may host several biological forms that colonize the debris cover, especially if the glacier tongue reaches sufficiently low altitudes (down to about 1700 m a.s.l. at Miage Glacier, Western Italian Alps) thus allowing also tree growth. Supraglacial trees colonizing the debris-covered tongue are strongly influenced in growth and distribution by substrate characteristics and instability. The tree age distribution at Miage Glacier presents a positive gradient towards the glacier terminus, which was found to be related to the decreasing glacier surface velocity. By analysing tree-ring growth anomalies on the glacier and at a control site at the tree line over the 20-year period 1987-2006, it was found that trees growing on the glacier presented the highest percentages of abrupt growth changes (AGCs)>+70% with respect to the four previous years. Considering tree displacement on the glacier surface over the same 20-year period and the recorded AGCs, it was found that the central-lower portion of the southern lobe towards the margins was the most unstable. The temporal analysis of AGC>+40% confirmed a period of higher glacier surface instability, reaching a maximum in the years 1988 (on lobe S) and 1989 (on lobe N), probably related to the passage of a kinematic wave in the glacier tongue. Our analysis suggests that supraglacial trees hold useful information on the glacier tongue dynamics and that both AGC>+70% and AGC>+40% may be used as a proxy for substrate instability in spatio-temporal reconstructions in the Alpine environment.
No
English
Settore GEO/04 - Geografia Fisica e Geomorfologia
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
2013
42
3
613
622
10
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Past surface instability of Miage debris-covered glacier tongue (Mont Blanc Massif, Italy): a decadal-scale tree-ring-based reconstruction / G. LEONELLI, M. PELFINI. - In: BOREAS. - ISSN 0300-9483. - 42:3(2013), pp. 613-622.
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Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
2
262
Article (author)
si
G. LEONELLI, M. PELFINI
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/223212
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