2/ Where are the typical locations where glaciers receive most precipitation?
3/ Mainly:
- in the mid-latitudes storm track: New Zealand, Patagiona, western North-America, Norway...
- in the Monsoon influenced eastern Himalayas
These locations receive a lot of precipitation - Patagonia and north-eastern India are probably the wettest places on Earth!
4/ We also see that these "wet" glaciers are found where it is warmest. Why?
We'll come back to this, but from a glacier's perspective, this makes sense: more ice melts where it is warmer 🤒, but glaciers can subsist if this is compensated by a lot of snow accumulation ❄️
5/ Now, let's turn this around and select the glaciers located at the coldest locations on Earth, below -20°C average temperature 🥶 Where are these located?
6/ Mainly:
- the Northern Latitudes: Arctic Canada, North Greenland, Russian Arctic
- high mountains in the Karakoram (Himalayas)
You will find colder locations in continental Antarctica for example, but there are no "mountain glaciers" there, only the ice sheet.
7/ Interestingly, the coldest glaciers are also the ones receiving much less precipitation than the world average! Why?
8/ This is one consequence of the famous
Clausius–Clapeyron relation 🧐
Cold air can hold less water vapour than warm air -> cold regions such as Antarctica and the Arctic are also "deserts", but cold ones. Clausius–Clapeyron also explains why warmer glaciers are also wetter.
9/ That's all for today! We'll try to write more posts of this kind in the upcoming weeks.
If you can't wait that long, visit OGGM-Edu and help us write some more!
What makes them so special to us? They are coming from research groups 👏 outside of the OGGM core team 👏 1/3
This makes us proud, because it rewards all the work that went into documenting the code and making of OGGM (oggm.org) a useful and user friendly model. 2/3
We still have a lot of work to do to make the model even more user friendly. We are always seeking funding to achieve this, but it turns out to be quite difficult using traditional schemes. If you are aware of software oriented funds that we could apply for, let us know! 3/3
edu.oggm.org is an #interactive platform to #learn and #teach about #glaciers. We started OGGM-Edu as the "educational branch" of OGGM, but nowadays we see the project as largely independent and useful on its own. Why do we hope that it can be useful to you? 1/n
OGGM-Edu offers "hands-on" and practical activities, but only very little textbook content: we see the platform as an interactive complement to existing (and awesome) resources such as antarcticglaciers.org (@AntarcticGlacie) 2/n
Therefore, OGGM-Edu does not attempt to be a "one stop shop" for all things related to glaciers: our target groups are #instructors and independent learners. For example, OGGM-Edu was used by @LizzUltee to teach a week-long workshop in Peru with @CdeCPeru. 3/n
Today: "Contribution potential of glaciers to water availability in different climate regimes" by Kaser et al. (2010): pnas.org/content/107/47… Published only a few months after the "Himalaya Gate", this paper attempts to bring some data driven facts in an over-heated debate. 2/
The authors discuss the relative importance of glacier seasonal melt to several river basins. They find that the seasonally delayed glacier contribution is largest where rivers enter seasonally arid regions and negligible in the lowlands of basins governed by monsoon 3/
Let's start a new hashtag: #FridayCryospherePaper! From now on and until the submission deadline for the upcoming #EGU20 (Jan 15th), each Friday we will highlight a new paper which was important for the field of large scale glaciology. Why? 1/6
Today, we highlight a fundamental paper which made global scale glaciology even possible in the first place: "The Randolph Glacier Inventory: a globally complete inventory of glaciers" by The Randolph Consortium. cambridge.org/core/journals/… 3/6