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Detection of abrupt changes in glacier mass balance in the Tien Shan Mountains

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

M. S. Cao*
Affiliation:
Lanzhou Institute of Glaciology and Geocryology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Lanzhou 730000, China
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Abstract

Based on glacier mass-balance records collected, compiled and published by the World Glacier Monitoring Service (WGMS), an attempt is made here to determine whether there were abrupt decadal-scale changes in annual balance on glaciers in the Tien Shan Mountains. There appears to have been an abrupt change in the mid-1970s; two-thirds of the change was caused by an increase in annual ablation and the other one-third by a decrease in the annual accumulation. Thus, the change was caused mainly by a summer-temperature increase, supplemented by a decrease in annual snowfall. Climate records suggest that this event, in effect, is in response to a shift hi the background state of the coupled Ocean -atmosphere system over the Tropical Pacific during the mid-1970s.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 1998 

Introduction

Since the 1970s, abrupt changes in climate have been attracting increased attention. Climate researehers are frequently detecting new abrupt events at different time-scales, analyzing their characteristics, and discussing dynamic mechanisms (Reference Goossens and LabeyrieGoossens and Berger, 1987). For example, although annual temperature departures over the Northern Hemisphere have often varied from positive to negative, or conversely, since 1851, statistical analysis has shown that there was, in fact, a significant shift in temperature from a colder to a warmer regime in the early 1920s (Reference Yamamoto and SanagYamamoto and others, 1985).

Glaciers are an important environmental feature in high mountain areas. In a given mountain area, climate change directly influences the size, flow rate and even the existence of glaciers. Conversely, glacial fluctuations lead indirectly to the preservation of records of significant changes in climate. For example, based on the analysis of δ18 0 records in ocean-sediment cores, statistical studies show that there was an abrupt change in climate about 900kaBP, in the middle of the Pleistocene, involving worldwide cooling and an increase in ice mass (Reference MaaschMaasch, 1988). Mountain glaciers and small ice caps are particularly sensitive to climate and it has been suggested that they could be used to monitor environmental or climatic changes (Reference Meier and FreyMeier, 1965; Reference Barry, and and LutherBarry, 1985). Several recent studies have discovered an abrupt change in climate in the tropical and North Pacific Ocean in the mid-1970s (Reference TrenberthTrenberth, 1990; Reference GrahamGraham, 1994). Here, an attempt is made to determine whether this change affected glacier mass balance in the Tien Shan Mountains, using statistical tests.

Data

Because most glaciers are located in sparsely populated, cold, high-mountain areas, field work is difficult and data on glacier fluctuations are scaree. Less than about 1 % of the glaciers in the world are surveyed, and less than one-tenth of those surveyed have been measured for mass balance. Systematic measurements, starting in the mid-1950s have resulted in valuable records (Reference WoodWood, 1988). The World Glacier Monitoring Service (WGMS) has collected and compiled available datasets and published six volumes of data on mass balance and glacier fluctuations (Reference KasserKasser, 1967, Reference Kasser1973; Reference MüllerMüller, 1977; Reference HaeberliHaeberli, 1985, Reference HaeberliHaeberli and Müller. 1988, Reference HaeberliHaeberli and Hoelzle, 1993).

The Tien Shan Mountains range in Central Asia is about 2100 km long and 250-400 km wide (Fig. 1). According to a recent inventory, there are 16490 glaciers in the range, of which only three, Ts. Tuyuksu, Karabatkak and Urumqi No. 1, or 0.02% of the total, have mass-balance records more than 26 years long. All of the data used here have been published in the previously mentioned WGMS publications with modifications according to the latest corrected data (Reference DyurgerovDyurgerov and others, 1995) and are given in Table l. The data for Urumqi glacier No. 1 have been reconstructed for 1967-78 using records from a nearby meteorological station. The locations and some characteristics of the three glaciers discussed here are shown in Figure 1 and Table 2, respectively. Although mass-balance data are available in the WGMS reports for eight other glaciers near Ts. Tuyuksu, most of the data have been reconstructed and all of the glaciers are located in the same small basin. Hence, these are not discussed here.

Precipitation in the Tien Shan Mountains is concentrated in the spring and summer and, in fact, shifts from spring to summer as one moves from west to east, for example, in the Ts. Tuyuksu basin, 7% of the precipitation occurs in the winter (December February), 35% in the spring (March-May) and 43% in the summer (.June-August), whereas in the Urumqi glacier No. 1 basin the corresponding percentages are 2, 18 and 66%. Thus, a significant fraction of the accumulation occurs during the ablation season. This makes the inter-seasonal processes of glacier mass balance different from those on glaciers nourished primarily during the colder times of the year.

Fig. 1. Locations of the three glaciers studied.

Table 1. The observational records (mm) of annual accumulation (C), ablation (A) and mass balance (B) on three glaciers in the Tien Shan Mountains

As a consequence of this temporal distribution of accumulation, frequent measurements are needed during the summer to ensure reliable estimates of the seasonal distribution of accumulation and ablation (Xie and Liu, 1993). For example, mass balance is measured on Ts. Tuyuksu two to four times each month in the Summer, and only once in the winter. These measurements utilize 130-150 stakes and several snow pits. The annual accumulation, ablation and mass balance are calculated for 100 m elevation intervals. Similarly, on Urumqi glacier No. 1, mass balance is measured two or three times a month each summer using 69 stakes and several snow pits. Urumqi glacier No. 1 has two major branches; on each branch there are one longitudinal and eight transverse lines of stakes. In addition to such measurements, the precipitation gradient is measured in glacierized areas in the vicinity of glacier Karabatkak, and is used, in conjunction with the precipitation data, to obtain a separate estimate of the mass input. This is used, together with runoff data, to check the mass-balance measurements.

METHODS

Most studies detect abrupt changes in climate by using statistical tests. Generally, the mean values of climatic parameters are used to determine whether there has been a jump. This approach is used on glacier mass-balance data in this paper. Both the moving t-test (MTT) and Mann-Kendall rank test (MKRT) are used, and the results are compared.

In the MTT, if the difference between means over two adjacent time intervals reaches a stipulated statistical significance level, an abrupt change is inferred to have occurred. Whether a change is detected depends on the choice of significance level. Thus, suppose a stochastic variable sequence of annual balance is divided into two sub-sets, x1 and x2. Let μi, Si and ni represent the mean, variance and sample size of the two sub-sets (i = 1,2), respectively. The data are then analyzed using the null hypothesis H0 : μi = μ2 and the test statistic, t0, is calculated as follows:

Where, is the sample covariance. Because we are interested in decadal time-scales, n1= n2= 10. It is evident that t0 ~ t (n1 + n2 - 2). Given the significance level α and its corresponding critical value tα, the null hypothesis H0 will be rejected for |t0| > tα.This would suggest that a jump is present between the two neighboring sub-sets.

Figure 2 is the time series of annual balance from 1956-57 through 1989-90 for glacier Ts. Tuyuksu. Curve (a) of Figure 3 is the corresponding accumulative curve for 34 years. Curves (b) and (c) of Figure 3 show similar data for glaciers Karabatkak and Urumqi glacier No. 1, respectively. It appears that there was a pronounced change in the early to mid-1970s. It is, however, not always as easy as this to distinguish when accumulative curves are atypical (see Reference Letréguilly and ReynaudLetréguilly and Reynaud, 1990, Fig. 3). The statistical tests applied here, however, can detect such changes. Figure 4 shows results of the MTT test using n1= n2= 10 years. It is clear that a jump occurs in the early 1970s on glaciers Ts. Tuyuksu and Karabatkak, and probably in the late 1970s on Urumqi glacier No. 1, and that their tests reach the significance level α = 0.05 in the first two cases.

Fig. 2. Time series of annual balance from 1956-57 through 1989-90 for glacier Ts.Tuyuksu.

Fig. 3. Accumulative curve of annual balance for glaciers (a) Ts.Tuyuksu: (b) Karabatkak; (c) Urumqi glacier, No. 1

If there is little difference between the magnitude of ni and the length of the entire sequence, jumps near or at the ends of the sequence cannot he detected. The non-parametric MKRT test partly avoids this weakness. It is generally agreed that the detection range of MKRT is broader and the timing more precise (Reference Goossens and LabeyrieGoossens and Berger, 1987). The null hypothesis of MKRT is H0: there is no trend change in the sequence of mass balance , x1,…, xN For each element, xi the numbers mi of elements xj preceding it (j < i) such that (xj < xi)are computed. Then, one assumes that the test statistic dk, its expected value E[dk], and variance var[dk], are as follows:

Fig. 4. Abrupt change in annual balance detected using MTT for glaciers (a) Ts.Tuyuksu; (b) Karabatkak: (c) Urumqi glacier No. 1. (Solid horizontal line is the critical value corresponding to the significance level shown.)

Normalizing yields:

u(dk) = dk - E[dk var[c4]

where u(dk) has a normal distribution, and the probability α1 = prob(| u |>|u(dk|) can be determined using tables or calculations. If α0 is the significance level of the test (e.g. 0.05), the null hypothesis is accepted or rejected depending on whether α1 is greater or less than α0 When values of u{dk) violate the null hypothesis, the existence of an increasing(dk > 0) or decreasing (dk< 0) trend in the data will be indicated.

Figure 5 presents the results of the MKRT lest. Curves C1 are constructed from u(dk) except that u(d1) = 0. The same procedure can be used for the retrograde series, where mi represents the numbers of the elements for

The variation of the sequence u*(dk) is shown by C2 in Figure 5. The approximate time of an abrupt change that occurs within the confidence interval is represented by the intersection of the direct and backward curves, C1 and C2.

Results and Discussion

The results of applying these techniques to the mass-balance records of the three glaciers studied are listed in Table 2. All tests detected jumps with significance levels α = 0.05, except that for Urumqi glacier No. 1, which yielded a significance level at 0.10 only. It is evident that, although the annual balance in this region has been predominantly negative since the 1950s, the negative-balance rate increased after the mid-1970s. For example, the mean balance rates tor glacier Ts. Tuyuksu are 81 and -667 mm a −1 water equivalent before and after the jump, respectively. The difference between them is -586mma−1, being 1.83 times larger than the mean of 374 mm a−1 for the entire 34years. It appears That the climatic environment in the Tien Shan Mountains became warmer and drier after the mid-1970s, and that this change was superimposed on the overall warmer trend in this century.

Fig. 5. Abrut changes in annual balance detected using MKRT for glaciers (a) Ts.Tuyuksu; (b) Karabatkak; (c) Urumqi glacier No. 1. (C1 and C2 are the variation curves for forward and backward sequences of the statistic u and u*, and the solid horizontal line is the critical value corresponding to the significance level shown.)

Table 2. Detected results of abrupt change for three glaciers in the Tien Shan Mountains

Fig. 6. Abrupt change in annual accumulation detected using MTT for glaciers (a) Ts. Tuyuksu. (b) Karabatkak; (c) Urumqi glacier No.1.(For explanation, see Figure 4.)

Results of analyses of the annual accumulation and ablation series separately show that the jump years are 1970-71 and 1972-73, respectively, for Ts. Tuyuksu; 1971-72 and 1974-75 for glacier Karabatkak; and 1975-76 and 1977-78 for Urumqi glacier No. 1 (Figs 6-9). Note that the jump year for annual ablation coincides with, or follows by 1 year, that of annual balance (table 2), but follows that for accumulation by 2-3 years. Note also (table 3) that approximately two-thirds of the difference in annual balance is a result of a change in annual ablation; the other one-third is due to a change in annual accumulation. The mass balance incorporates the effects of both annual accumulation and ablation. Thus, the abrupt decrease in annual balance for these three glaciers was caused more by the variation in annual ablation than by that in accumulation.

Normally, snow accumulation is concentrated in the winter and ablation in the summer, so annual accumulation and ablation vary with winter precipitation and summer temperature, respectively. However, as noted, this is not Uncase in this part of the Tien Shan Mountains. The record of summer temperature and annual precipitation at the Daxigou meteorological station (43°06’N, 86°50’ E; 3539 m a.s.1.), near Urumqi glacier No. 1, are shown in Table 4. Analyses of these data by MTT and MKRT are shown in figures 10 and 11. It is clear that there are no abrupt changes even at the 0.10 significance level, in either case. The differences in the means before and after 1977-78 are only 0.2 °C and -19mm, respectively. This lack of evidence for abrupt changes may be attributed to the unusual inter-seasonal distribution of precipitation mentioned above. Under such conditions, both accumulation and ablation may be influenced by either precipitation or temperature, or both. For example, if there is no change in precipitation in the summer, an increase in temperature will not only increase ablation but also decrease accumulation due to a lower ratio of solid to liquid precipitation. However, if an increase in temperature and a decrease in precipitation occur together, there will be a feed-back between ablation and accumulation due to the dependence of snowline elevation on snow accumulation. Thus, a lower than normal snowfall results in a higher snowline and a greater increase in ablation because, due to its lower albedo, ice normally melts 4-5 times faster than snow (personal communication from W. Tangborn, 1997). Therefore, although no statistically significant abrupt changes occur in annual precipitation and summer temperature; the feed-back amplifies the effect, resulting in a significant change in mass balance.

Fig. 7. Abrupt change in annual accumulation detected using MKRT for glaciers (a) Ts. Tuyuksu, (b) Karabatkak; Urumqi glacier No.1. (For explanation, see Figure 5.)

Fig. 8. Abrupt change in annual ablation detected using MTT for glaciers (a) Ts. Tuyuksu, (b) Karabatkak; (c) Urumqi glacier No. 1. (For explanation, see Figure 4.)

Fig. 9. Abrupt change in annual ablation detected using MKRT for glaciers (a) Ts. Tuyuksu, (b) Karabatkak; (c) Urumqi glacier No. 1. (For explanation, see Figure 5.)

Table 3. Detected results of annual accumulation and ablation for three glaciers

Table 3. The records at Daxigou meteorological station

Fig. 10. Abrupt change in (a) summer temperature and (b) annual precipitation detected using MTT for Urumqi glacier No. 1.

Fig. 11. Abrupt change in (a) summer temperature and (b) annual precipitation detected using MKRT for Urumqi glacier No.1.

In the basin of Urumqi glacier No. 1, appreciable changes in annual precipitation and summer temperature are detected in 1972-73 and 1976-77 (figs 10 and 11). It is noteworthy that 1976-77 is nearer the jump year for annual balance and ablation than that for accumulation. This again means that an increase in temperature dominated the abrupt change in mass balance, since most of the change is caused by ablation. The meteorological records al both Mynzhiliki(43° 05’ N, 77° 04’E; 3017 ma.s.l.) and Tien Shan (41°55’N, 78°14’E; 3614 ma.s.L) meteorological stations, near glacier Ts. Tuyuksu and Karabatkak, respectively, show-similar characteristics (Reference Chaohai and TiandingLiu and Han, 1992). A jump in summer temperature occurred in 1972-73 at Mynzhilki station that also reached the 0.05 significance level. Therefore, it seems that abrupt changes in mass balance for these glaciers are caused mainly by an increase in the summer temperature over the Tien Shan Mountains.

Conclusions

An abrupt change in the coupled ocean atmosphere system over the tropical Pacific during the mid-1970s was both observed and simulated by a general circulation model (Graham, 199-1). This led to obvious changes in the large-scale boreal winter circulation pattern over the north Pacific, marked by a southward shift and intensification of the Aleutian Low and of the prevailing westerlies over the mid-latitude central and eastern Pacific. A difference in the 700 h Pa heights between 1970-71 and 1975-76, and 1976-77 and 1981-82 in the Tien Shan Mountains is confirmed by a t-test at a significance level α = 0.05. Thus, the abrupt change in glacier mass balance in the Tien Shan Mountains, in effect, corresponds to that event.

Variations in the positions of glacier fronts are often used to deduce climate change on longer time-scales, because these data are easy to collect, although the response lags the climate change, Mass balance, however, reflects the preceding years climate. Thus, it is more sensitive, as it directly links a glacier to its climatic environment. This research further suggests that monitoring mass balance can provide, directly, information on abrupt changes in climatic environments on short time-scales.

Acknowledgements

I am indebted to Professor Shi for his encouragement and discussions. I should also like to thank W. Tangborn of the Iceberg Monitoring Project, University of Washington, and D. Cayan, Climate Research Division, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, for their detailed reviews and many valuable suggestions for improvement of the manuscript. I should especially like to thank sincerely R. LeB. and A. P. Hooke for conscientious editing and retyping. This study was supported by the Chinese Academy of Sciences project “Basic research on dynamic changes in the cryosphere."

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Figure 0

Fig. 1. Locations of the three glaciers studied.

Figure 1

Table 1. The observational records (mm) of annual accumulation (C), ablation (A) and mass balance (B) on three glaciers in the Tien Shan Mountains

Figure 2

Fig. 2. Time series of annual balance from 1956-57 through 1989-90 for glacier Ts.Tuyuksu.

Figure 3

Fig. 3. Accumulative curve of annual balance for glaciers (a) Ts.Tuyuksu: (b) Karabatkak; (c) Urumqi glacier, No. 1

Figure 4

Fig. 4. Abrupt change in annual balance detected using MTT for glaciers (a) Ts.Tuyuksu; (b) Karabatkak: (c) Urumqi glacier No. 1. (Solid horizontal line is the critical value corresponding to the significance level shown.)

Figure 5

Fig. 5. Abrut changes in annual balance detected using MKRT for glaciers (a) Ts.Tuyuksu; (b) Karabatkak; (c) Urumqi glacier No. 1. (C1 and C2 are the variation curves for forward and backward sequences of the statistic u and u*, and the solid horizontal line is the critical value corresponding to the significance level shown.)

Figure 6

Table 2. Detected results of abrupt change for three glaciers in the Tien Shan Mountains

Figure 7

Fig. 6. Abrupt change in annual accumulation detected using MTT for glaciers (a) Ts. Tuyuksu. (b) Karabatkak; (c) Urumqi glacier No.1.(For explanation, see Figure 4.)

Figure 8

Fig. 7. Abrupt change in annual accumulation detected using MKRT for glaciers (a) Ts. Tuyuksu, (b) Karabatkak; Urumqi glacier No.1. (For explanation, see Figure 5.)

Figure 9

Fig. 8. Abrupt change in annual ablation detected using MTT for glaciers (a) Ts. Tuyuksu, (b) Karabatkak; (c) Urumqi glacier No. 1. (For explanation, see Figure 4.)

Figure 10

Fig. 9. Abrupt change in annual ablation detected using MKRT for glaciers (a) Ts. Tuyuksu, (b) Karabatkak; (c) Urumqi glacier No. 1. (For explanation, see Figure 5.)

Figure 11

Table 3. Detected results of annual accumulation and ablation for three glaciers

Figure 12

Table 3. The records at Daxigou meteorological station

Figure 13

Fig. 10. Abrupt change in (a) summer temperature and (b) annual precipitation detected using MTT for Urumqi glacier No. 1.

Figure 14

Fig. 11. Abrupt change in (a) summer temperature and (b) annual precipitation detected using MKRT for Urumqi glacier No.1.