A Global Assessment of Glacier Outburst
Floods
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A Global Assessment of Glacier Outburst Floods
Executive Summary and
Introduction
Floods on the glacier are massive quantities of water suddenly released
from a glacier. A glacier lake flares out, regardless of subtype, reason or technique,
is a sudden discharge of water or part of it retained in a glacial lake (GLOF) (Wikstrom
Jones & Wolken, 2019). They are a common natural hazard found worldwide. They are
linked mainly to climate through glacial mass balance and have a partly demographic and
land use impact for society. With continued climate change, land use and population
dispersal, it is crucial to recognize the spatial pattern and effects of glacier
outbursts. This study includes data from six continents and a century-old glacier flood.
The floods of glaciers in Iceland, South America 5745, European Alpine Europe 393 and
Central Asia 6300 have killed at least seven people (Ramskogler et al., 2020). There
having been less flooding but more damage to Nepal, Peru and India. Floods flooded
agricultural land, destroyed households, damaged roads, and affected infrastructure,
with 10 percent of the glacier sites in South America producing people murdered and
affected infrastructures and with 15 percent of Central Asian site flooding, destroying
homes, damaged roads and deteriorated infrastructures flooding agricultural land (Chen
& Cho, 2019).
The repercussions of glacier floods on Bhutan and Nepal are most
national. In order to better understand spatiotemporal patterns in glacier flood events
and size, we suggest reliable, complete and harmonized glacier flood control, recording
and reporting. Future global glacial flood modelling has to take account of land-use
changes as well as the likely distribution of geomorphological reactions to climate
change and human activities.
Background
Jökulhlaups are unexpected discharges of significant amounts of water from
a glacier, and are also known as glacial outbursts. The hydrographic qualities of these
floods are comparable to dam break flooding, as they usually result from the breaking
down of glacial lakes, ice, moraine or sloping dams (Lindbäck, 2019). They include
subglacial volcanic or geothermal floods and strong precipitation that fall
extraordinarily swiftly through glacier catchments. The outbursts of a glacier and
hydrographs occur through the downwashing of a glacier and subsequent discharge of
meltwater. Environmental factors that in turn have an impact on climate conditions
control the creation and development of ice- and morain-dammed Lakes (Peyaud et al.,
2007). Climate can affect the characteristics of certain glacier outbreaks like onset
and peak releases.
The number and area of the glacial lakes worldwide is increasing
as a result of continuous global deglaciation. Volcanic activity under ice weights,
through virtual ice melts and by drainage of meltwasser momentarily held in a water bag
or glacier lake, can lead to glacial flooding.Glacier outbursts have been witnessed for
millennia especially in Iceland and Europe, where records date from the 1500s (Carrivick
& Tweed, 2019). Glacier floods have a social effect, including the immediate
destruction and damage to infrastructure and property, community instability and loss of
life, as demonstrated in the Alps of Europe, South America, and the Himalayas. As a
consequence of a glacier outburst of Lac du Mauvoisin that was recognized to influence
scientific thinking about glacial and geological geology, hundreds of people have
perished and houses and infrastructure has been destroyed, thus launching modern
science.
Lyell (1830) effectively opposed catastrophic events in his work on
‘Geology Principles’ and paved the path for scientical thought which
acknowledged ice ages in the past, and therefore a changing climate (Costa, 2013).
Secondly: Ignaz Venetz was a Swiss engineer responsible with water drainage from the Lac
du Mauvoisin and conducted the first Alpine glacier investigation (Hellmann et al.,
2020). He and John de Charpentier, Jens Esmark, William Buckland, and lastly Louis
Agassiz examined the link between glacial fluctuation and ecological change. Recent
major research has examined the conceptualisation of sources, triggers and processes,
physical mechanics that drive the production and routing of the meltwater through the
glacier and the landscape consequences. While in these and other regional research
reports the repercussions of glacier spring fluxes are often stressed, a thorough
worldwide impact assessment of glacier spring flooding has yet to be conducted on
communities.
The aim of this study is to offer a global assessment of the
implications of glacier floods. We concentrate mostly on descriptive statistics of and
relative importance of glacial floods because it is demonstrated, given the nature of
current data, it is difficult to determine the absolute impact of most occurrences. In
order to be clear, throughout this text ‘glacier floods’ are called
‘glacier floods.’ Glacial floods are referred to as “floods” for
the sake of this work.
Mechanisms and Causes of Glacial Lake Outburst Floods
(GLOF)
There are a number of sources and procedures utilized to discharge water for
flooding induced by glacial lake outburst. Causes are linked with mechanisms and not
every possible combination is viable. In addition, various subtypes of the glacial lake
are susceptible to various causes and processes of flooding. Many studies have been
carried out to study the cause of the lake explosions in particular lake subtypes and
regions but to better understand the complex processes and, therefore, to ensure more
efficient risk and hazard management, systemic research into the causes and the
mechanisms of the Glacial Lake Outburst flow, as well as the database development, are
essential.
Movement of the Slope into the Lake at a Rapid Pace
The lake can generate a lake
explosion when quick slides such as toboggans, falls, avalanches and flows contact the
lake. Like moraine and ice dams, quick movement in the lake leads to displacement waves
that can rapidly cause the dam to overtop or break. The main source of Glacial Lake
Outburst Flood in the Himalayas and Andes has been identified as several forms of rapid
downhill movement, including ice avalanche.
According to the Lake Outburst Floods in
the Cordillera Blanca in Peru, despite tens of meters of dam freeboard, displacement
waves can overwhelm the dam under such circumstances (Vilca et al., 2021). There have
been many accounts from throughout the world of Glacial Lake Outburst Floods produced by
fast slope changes. Slope movements in high mountain locations are considered to have
increased as a result of climate change. These slope motions are associated with ice
avalanches, glacier ice loss, and rock/ice avalanches, as well as a variety of other
slope motions associated with permafrost degradation.
Snow Melt/ Heavy Rainfall
Improved dumping High rainfall, heavy snowmelt or a
combination of the two leads to increased water inflow from a lake. Greater discharge in
moraine-dammed lakes, and also maybe in ice-dammed lakes, may result in a greater amount
of erosion and outflow incision into the dam. Many Glacial Lake Outburst Flooding in
British Columbia and the US Cascade Range, notably the 1920s Tide Lake Outburst Flood
and the lake beneath Dellier Glacier, were responsible for heavy rains. The 2013 Glacial
Lake Outburst Floods on Chorabari Lake in the India Garhwal Himalayas, which culminated
in the Kedarnath calamity, also contributed to heavy rain (Kc et al., 2021). Heavy rain
can operate as an indirect cause of the outburst of Glacial Lake when it generates
pathways into the lake.
Flooding from an Upstream Lake
Glacial lakes are usually
structured into cascade patterns inside certain valleys. Outburst Glacial Lake Floods
can occur when glacial floods are blowing from upstream lakes downstream. During the
downstream lakes, the intensity and size of a downstream flood can either be increased
by discharging stored water or by lowering the volume of the flood by maintaining water
the intensity and size of the water. Increasingly, scientists concentrated on these
complicated connections with chain processes that will likely take hold in the
future.
Melting of Ice in the Dam/Formation of the Dam
In ice-dammed lakes, maybe
moraine-dammed lakes if a dam has a “icelen” or “dead” lens and
lakes, dammed in an environment of dry permafrost, such as lakes, dammed by rock
glaciers, ice is melted in dams. Throughout the creation of the lagoon and occurrence of
explosive flux caused by slope motions induced by permafrost, permafrost thawing and
degradation might thus play a significant role. Drainage of a tunnel into the Basal Ice,
marginal ice drainage with part of the ice dam physically collapses or a combination of
both is induced by flooding from ice dam lakes.
The volcanic Jökulhlaup volcanic
explosion flood caused by the lake is a form of volcanic explosion. The fusion of ice
cores in an ice-cored moraine lake can cause the dam and tubes to collapse in structure
as well as a dam subsidy which can lead to additional surface outflow(s), incisions and
breaches.
Subsurface Outflow Tunnels Being Obstructed
Glacial lakes that are not
available in moraine or ice dams are sensitive to river-borne debris and fluxes, such as
slopes on the internal slopes of the moraine dams that enclose outflow tunnels. The
dam’s internal structure is affected by an earthquake; the outflow channels of the
dam are freezing. When the subsurface outflow tunnel(s) are closed, the lake level would
rise and the dam can break down due to increased hydrostatic pressure or the dam
incision. On July 11, 1981, the moraine dam at Lake Zhangzhanbo in Tibet failed due to
the blockage of underground outflow pipes (Rivas et al., 2015).
Dam Degradation Over
Time
Spontaneous moraine (icy) dam failure without a dynamic cause, can be explained
by long-term degrading mechanisms such as dam-self destruction, such as slow changes in
the internal structure of the dam leading to piping and collapse or hydrostatic
pressure. This source was accused for the many floods in the Hindu Kush Himalayas,
especially those in Lake Lugge Tsho, Bhutan Himalaya in Glacial Lake Outburst in 1994,
resulting in the depths of the lake due to increased hydrostatic pressure produced by
the basal ice melting.
Recent Glacier Retreat, Climate Oscillations, and the Glaciation Cycle
The Quaternary
Period
The Quaternary epoch, which lasted 2.588 million years and included ice ages,
glacial periods, and interglacial occurrences, was characterized by many climatic
variations. Colder glacial periods, in general, have a larger glacierized area, whereas
interglacial events have a lesser ice extent (Kasse, 2012). According to marine isotope
oxygen phase, about a hundred changes occurred over the quaternary period of warmer and
warmer paleoclimates (MIS). The Holocene period is distinguished by variable climate
conditions in space and time, as well as glacial reactions.
Little Ice Age (LIA)
Glacier Retreat and Post-LIA Glacier Retreat
The Little Ice Age (LIA) was the
Holocene’s final colder epoch, lasting from 1400-1700 AD, with the biggest cooling
in the northern hemisphere. In the majority of high-altitude mountainous and
high-latitude Arctic areas, post-LIA climatic change, globe ice loss and glacier retreat
have been documented. Between 1850 and 1970, the Alpine Glaciers lost 35%, but between
1850 and 2000 they lost around 50% (Leigh et al., 2020). Alpine glaciers lost an
estimated two-thirds of their ice during this period. Numerous studies have been
conducted, for example, in the Alps, Andes, and Himalayas, to estimate recent glacier
changes in a regional context.
Glacial Lake Formation and Evolution
The emergence
and growth of several subtypes of glacial lakes are frequently followed by the loss and
retreat of glacial ice. Some of them are ice-stick lakes, moraine-sticking lakes and
lakes that are rock-sticking. In reaction to glacial retreat, Moraine- and Rock-broken
lakes develop from proglacial stages of immediate touch with the mother tongue to
glacier-detached phases of non-direct contact with certain glaciers in the catchment to
nonglacial phases of no glaciers in the collection.Generally specified stages are linked
to the threat of a particular lake, such as floods from the lake. Most Glacial Lake
Outburst Floods (70%) have been observed due to ice blocked lakes (Wikstrom Jones &
Wolken, 2019). Flooding out of lakes is regarded to be a separate pattern of evolution
that may never occur once, however different subtypes of glacial lakes are subject to
various causes and subsequent lake explosion processes.
Lakes That Have Been Flooded
by Ice
Ice dam lakes can be situated on top of supraglacial lakes in the glaciers,
under sub-glacial lakes in the glaciers, or on the glacier borders. The creation of ice
dams was related to climatic changes, the loss of glacier ice and surge activities of
glaciers. Surge glaciers sometimes experience large flow accelerations, usually
alongside terminal advances, leading to valleys being blocked and the lake formed: that
is, a main valley was blocked by the rising glacier in a valley on the sides, or a side
valles blocked by an uplifting glacier in the main valley. The creation of ice dams and
ensuing flares was witnessed on multiple occasions.
Ice dammed lakes range from
little pools up to 10 meters in capacity to enormously wide lakes with capacity of more
than 10 meters. Large ice dammed lakes, especially in high latitude locales, exist in
plain topography settings. The development of small supra-Lakes and its eventual merger
frequently precede the establishment in the correct topographical circumstances of a
moraine or ground-blocked glacial lake. On one hand, ice dams are often transitory, and
when a portion of the imprisoned waters is released, ice cream-strung lakes are likely
to blow up. The ice-dammed lakes are prone to overtopping and dam collapse processes for
both water discharge dams. On the other hand, large ice dam lakes can endure for
millennia if the weather is stable.
Lakes that have been dammed by the
moraine
Moraine-dammed lakes are lakes held by every kind of moraine. Morain-dammed
lakes, depending on the damming moraine, can form in various situations. Lakes with
moraine dams are typically found in mountainous places and can be up to 10 meters in
volume (Frey, 2021). During early periods of glacial retreat, moraines-dammed lakes such
as the LIA-Moraine-dammed lakes which developed during the Little Ice Ages, were
discovered to have receded from their maximum places with moraines.
Moraine-blocked
lakes can also occur during buried dead ice cream, as can be shown in the creation and
extension of Lake Imja in the 1980-90s (Pryakhina et al., 2021). Dam overtops and dam
collapses are common in moraine dammed lakes and most Glacial Lake outbursts happen when
lakes are exposed to baling processes and wave displacements. early stage of lake growth
is a forecast of the lake development.
Lakes That Have Been Flooded by Bedrock
In glacial depressions, glacial lakes buried
in basement can be found. Rock dams are considered stable rock structures. The dam
overtopping hence is the only mechanism for the explosion of a lake in this subtype of
the glacial lake. The formation of lakes dammed by moraine prevails in the early phases
of glacier retreat, i.e. LIA moraines, but in the later phases, i.e. LIA circuses and
bedrocks, the production of bedrock lakes predominate in the postLIA glacier retreat
patterns seen. Such rock dammed lakes as moraine dammed lakes, especially susceptible to
outbursts, if they undergo calving activities in the early proglacial
period.
Perspectives for the future
In the majority of mountains worldwide, the
post-LIA glacier loss and retreat has been seen, and this trend is predicted to continue
or accelerate in the 21st century. For increased management, over-depths of glacer beds
are anticipated to identify places for new possibly dangerous lakes in future. In order
to improve the risk management of Glacial Lake Outburst Floods. Current lakes are more
and more fragile as glaciers continue to decline from outbursts resulting from the ice
avalanche/calving process.
The amount of water in it may dramatically fluctuate in
the course of time. The glacial lakes, when exposed to calving processes and ice
avalanches, are more susceptible to an outburst at the end of their proglacial phase
when the volume of lake is high, whereas in the glaciar-detached phase (phase II) the
outburst flood is less likely when the vulnerability is reduced in the atmosphere and
residual susceptibility exists only (Phase III).
Data Sources, Methods and
Analysis
Data Sources
An Open-Office spreadsheet with seven sheets titled after
the regions for which we obtained historical Glacial Lake Outburst Floods occurrences
was accessible as of July 31, 2021. Each sheet has 32 columns with the attributes for
each Glacial Lake Outburst Floods that we were able to get. Empty cells indicate
‘No Data.’ The name of the column is displayed first, followed by two rows
of extra text and data structure information. The data in the columns ‘Major RGI
Region,’ ‘Mountain range Region,’ ‘Glacier,’ ‘RGI
Glacier Id,’ and ‘RGI Glacier Area’ are taken from the Randolph
Glacier Inventory, Version 6.0 (GLIMS: Global Land Ice Measurements from Space, n.d.).
Methods and Analysis
The first step in analyzing Glacial Lake Outburst Floods is to
properly identify hazardous lakes or lakes prone to lake outburst floods. Unlike
“classical” hydrometeorologically induced floods, Glacial Lake Outburst Floods are rare
and cannot generally be anticipated using return periods; moreover, the threat changes
with time, signifying the development of a specific lake (Dahlquist & West, 2021). A
variety of primarily remotely sensed data-based methods for detecting dangerous lakes
have been developed for diverse settings.
Regionally based approaches appear to be
the most realistic solution, reflecting the several primary causes of Glacial Lake
Outburst Floods in different situations. Some examples include methods created for the
Himalaya area, Blanca, British Columbia, Peru, and the Swiss Alps (Villa, 2020). The
majority of methods are based on the evaluation of selected features which indicate an
increase in the likelihood of lake explant floods dividing into three categories: dam
features like dam type, dam freeboard and dam geometry; lake features like lake area and
volume; and lake surrounding features such as the glacier and the path.
Detailing
potential areas and identifying subsequent elements at risk usually is based on a number
of modeling approaches such as digital elevation models and pre-defined event-triggering
scenarios, including the incline movement of a particular volume into the lake and
validation of previous Glacial Lake Outburst Floods (Allen et al., 2021). Once hazardous
lakes have been identified and potentially impacted regions have been identified, the
elements at risk are shown.
Naturally, these techniques are laden with uncertainty
and possible drawbacks; nonetheless, they have shown to be useful in risk management for
Glacial Lake Outburst Floods. As a result, risk reduction strategy and vulnerability
reduction are often employed to lower the risk of Outburst Floods on Glacial Lake.
We
showed the total number of outbursts per area by study and dam type of glacial lake, to
give a feeling of the frequency of outburst flows from Glacial Lake in the research
regions:
We also created a stacked bar plot with the overall number of Glacial Lake Outburst Floods by decade, research region, and dam type:
Conclusion
The loss and retreat of ice from glaciers has been a subject of intensive
investigation in many regions worldwide, typically in combination with the birth and
evolution of lakes, glacier lakes, icedamed lakes and moraine lakes and rock-damped
lakes. In locations which have become deglaciated during the Little Ice Age when the
last significant glacier progress has been occurring, a big number of glacial lakes have
formed. These lakes are usually dynamic, short-lived entities. Glacial Lake Outburst
Floods are a sort of glacial lake evolutionary pattern in which a portion of the
lake’s held water is abruptly released, independent of the reason, process, or
glacial lake subtype involved.
Rapid pitching in the lagoon; high rainfall/snow melt;
upstream lake cascade flooding; terrible ice melting; jökulhlaups caused ice melting /
molding of the dam including volcanic activity; sub-surface exit tunnels can be blocked
with suction only; the retreat of the glacer is linked with most causes, either directly
or indirectly. There may be two different mechanisms for water release following causal
processes: lake-outburst flood dams which are overturned by a wave of displacement, with
the bulk of the water released flows on the dam without causing damage; and dam failures
where most of the released water is released by dam failure, including direct dam
rupture, tube, incision and infringement and inoculation. Certain causes and glacial
lake subtypes are connected, and even little triggering events may lead to huge and
devastating processes.
The hydrological significance of Glacial Lake Outburst Floods
exceeds peak discharges considerably from the hydrometeorological floods resulting in an
unparalleled erosion and transport potential. Therefore, when erodable material is
present, it usually becomes flow-type movement, as does the flow of garbage. The main
Outburst Lake Glacial floods documented have brought about significant modification in
geomorphology. The Glacial Lake Outburst Floods may have disastrous social impacts if
populated areas are affected by this. In Andes and the Hinduc Kush Himalayas, fatal
glacial lake Outburst Floods have been seen.
As a result, the production and
development of several new, potentially dangerous glacial lakes as a result of
continuing climate change, the dangers of Glacial Lake Outburst Floods are expected to
increase, typically together to increase vulnerability of the components at risk and to
increase their adaptive capacity.