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Glacier
Mass-Balance Fluctuations in the Pacific Northwest and Alaska, USA
By Edward G. Josberger, William R. Bidlake, Rod S. March, and
Ben W. Kennedy
Annals of Glaciology V. 46, 2007, p. 291-6.
Abstract
The more than 40 year record of net and seasonal mass-balance records
from measurements made by the United States Geological Survey on South
Cascade Glacier, Washington, and Wolverine and Gulkana Glaciers, Alaska,
shows annual and interannual fluctuations that reflect changes in the
controlling climatic conditions at regional and global scales. As the
mass-balance record grows in length, it is revealing significant changes in
previously described glacier mass-balance behavior, and both inter-glacier
and glacier–climate relationships. South Cascade and Wolverine Glaciers are
strongly affected by the warm and wet maritime climate of the northeast
Pacific Ocean. Their net balances have generally been controlled by winter
accumulation, with fluctuations that are strongly related to the Pacific
Decadal Oscillation (PDO). Recently, warm dry summers have begun to dominate
the net balance of the two maritime glaciers, with a weakening of the
correlation between the winter balance fluctuations and the PDO.
Non-synchronous periods of positive and negative net balance for each
glacier prior to 1989 were followed by a 1989–2004 period of synchronous and
almost exclusively negative net balances that averaged –0.8 m for the three
glaciers.
Contents
Introduction
Changes in Net Balance
Glacier Volume
Trends in Seasonal Balances
Glacier Turnover
Inter-glacier and Glacier-climate Correlations
Summary
Acknowledgements
References
Josberger, E.G., Bidlake, W.R., March, R.S., and Kennedy,
B.W., 2007, Glacier Mass-Balance Fluctuations in the Pacific Northwest and
Alaska, USA, Annals of Glaciology, V. 46, p.291-6.
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