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The physical basis of glacier volume‐area scaling

David B. BahrInstitute of Arctic and Alpine Research, University of Colorado, BoulderMark F. MeierInstitute of Arctic and Alpine Research and Department of Geological Sciences, University of Colorado, BoulderS. D. PeckhamWater Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey, Boulder, Colorado
1997en
ABI

Аннотация

Ice volumes are known for only a few of the roughly 160,000 glaciers worldwide but are important components of many climate and sea level studies which require water flux estimates. A scaling analysis of the mass and momentum conservation equations shows that glacier volumes can be related by a power law to more easily observed glacier surface areas. The relationship requires four closure choices for the scaling behavior of glacier widths, slopes, side drag and mass balance. Reasonable closures predict a volume‐area scaling exponent which is consistent with observations, giving a physical and practical basis for estimating ice volumes. Glacier volume is insensitive to perturbations in the mass balance scaling, but changes in average accumulation area ratios reflect significant changes in the scaling of both mass balance and ice volume.

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