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Applying artificial snowfall to reduce the melting of the Muz Taw Glacier, Sawir Mountains

Feiteng Wang, Xiaoying Yue, Lin Wang, Huilin Li, Zhencai Du, Jing Ming, Zhongqin Li

2020˜The œcryosphere30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract. The glaciers in the Sawir Mountains, Altai area, have been experiencing a continuing and accelerating ice loss since 1959, although the snowfall is abundant and evenly distributed over the year. As an attempt to reduce their melting, we carried out two artificial snowfall experiments on the Muz Taw Glacier during 19–22 August 2018. We measured the albedo and mass balance at different sites along the glacier before and after the experiments. Two automatic weather stations (AWSs) were set up at the equilibrium line altitude (ELA) of the glacier as the target area and the forefield as the control area to record the precipitation, respectively. A comparison of the two precipitation records from the two AWSs suggests that natural precipitation could account for up to 21 % of the snowfall received by the glacier during the experiments. Because of the snowfalls, the glacier's surface albedo significantly increased in the middle to upper part; the average mass loss during 18–24 August (after the experiments) decreased by between 32 and 41 mm w.e (14 %–17 %) compared to during 12–18 August (before the experiments); and the mass resulting from the snowfall accounted for between 42 % and 54 % of the total melt during 18–24 August. We also propose a mechanism involving artificial snowfall, albedo, and mass balance, and the feedbacks describing the role of snowfall in reducing the melting of the glacier. The current status of the work is primitive as it is a preliminary trial, and the conclusions need more controlling experiments to validate it against larger spatio-temporal scales in future.

Topics & Concepts

SnowGlacierAlbedo (alchemy)PrecipitationGlacier mass balanceSnow lineGeologySnow fieldAutomatic weather stationAccumulation zoneClimatologyPhysical geographyAltitude (triangle)Environmental scienceAtmospheric sciencesCryosphereMeteorologyIce streamGeomorphologyGeographySnow coverSea iceGeometryPerformance artArt historyMathematicsArtCryospheric studies and observationsArctic and Antarctic ice dynamicsClimate change and permafrost