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| OPINION |
Himalayan Glaciers And Nepal By Dr. AB Thapa The last ice age, the
Pleistocene, consisted of several periods of glaciations
separated by interglacial periods of mild
climates. During the past two million years
there have been five major glacial advances and
five glacial retreats, the last of these being
our present period. It is said that Earth is now
in a warm interglacial period. At present the ice covers only
about 10 percent of the land surface. During the last ice age, however, ice covered
nearly 30 percent of the land. At its peak about 18,000 years ago ice sheets a kilometer
thick covered most of Northern Hemisphere. When the ice melted sea level rose by
tens of meters, flooding large areas including the Bering land bridge that had served as a
migration corridor for people moving into North America from Asia. During the present warm
interglacial period these large ice sheets have disappeared and glaciers worldwide have
generally shrunk. Origin of Glaciers Historical records on
climate generally do not go back more than 2,000 years.
Fortunately the past climates can be traced from many different
sources of evidence. Tree rings, for example, can provide information on climate during
the past 1,000 years; ice cores can cover the past 100,000 years; lake sediments furnish
evidence stretching back as much as a million years; and marine sediments can yield data
covering the past 10 million years. Scientists have used a combination of this evidence to
determine that ice ages, or cold periods, when Earths temperature is
about 8°C colder than during the warm, so-called interglacial periods, occur at roughly
100,000-year intervals. Some scientists believe that cycles of changes in the
distribution of sunlight due to long-term variations in Earths orbit and the
inclination of its spin axis to the Sun cause ice ages. These cycles are known as
Milankovich cycles, named after the Serbian mathematician who first computed
them. It is also a widely held belief
that the changes in atmosphere, such as
the decrease in carbon dioxide content that
allows a faster rate of heat loss to
outer space or an increase in atmospheric
dust due to volcanic eruptions that prevents
the warming effect of some of the suns
rays from reaching the earth account for
the origin of the ice ages. Annual Snow Line Most glaciers have two parts, an
accumulation area and an ablation or wastage area. In the accumulation area snowfall
exceeds melting in each year. In the ablation area melting exceeds snowfall. The boundary
between the two areas is called the annual snowline or sometimes the fern limit. In winter
most glaciers are entirely snow-covered. In spring the snow cover begins to melt in the
lower reaches, exposing the ice surface. As temperatures increase, the melting moves up
the glacier. The snowline is the highest position the melting reaches during the year.
Fern is old granular snow. The fern limit may not exactly coincide with the annual
snowline since in some years rapid melting leaves behind fern patches below the snowline. Some glaciers exhibit features called ice
streams and icefalls. Ice streams are valley glaciers that form tributaries to a common
compound glacier that fills a valley. The tributary glaciers do not intermix but maintain
their individual streams of ice, despite compression and extension as they move along side
by side. The streams can easily be recognized as individual ice streams by the deposits of
boulders, gravel, sand, and mud that separate them. Icefalls occur where a glacier flows
over very steep terrain that accelerates the flow. The ice is stretched and fractures into
large blocks and a maze of ice pinnacles. Icefalls are spectacular features that can
extend over the entire width of the glacier and over a height of up to a kilometer Glacier Movement As glaciers move over bedrock they
scrape and abrade its surface, producing fine-grained rock flour. Glaciers can also pluck
away rocks up to boulder size and transport and deposit them along the margins of the
glacier down in the valleys. The glaciers deposit these materials as till, a sediment
consisting of mud, sand, gravel, and boulders. Much of this material is deposited in long
mounds called moraines. Lateral moraines are formed on each side of a valley glacier where
abraded sediment and plucked rocks are deposited. These moraines are often preserved when
glaciers melt and can indicate previous glacier heights. Medial moraines separate
tributary glaciers that flow into a compound valley glacier. Terminal or end moraines mark
the farthest distance down a valley that a glacier has reached in its advance. Recessional
moraines indicate to where glaciers advanced and remained stationary for some time in the
past. Both terminal and recessional moraines can dam melt water streams, forming
glacial lakes. Glaciers also deposit a blanket of till that forms a ground moraine on the
surfaces over which the glacier flowed Climatic Changes Glaciers are very sensitive to climate
change. Their size, life span, and history of growth and retreat all depend strongly on
climate conditions. Since they are so sensitive to climatic changes they also serve as
good indicators of such change. A glaciers accumulation and ablation, or gain
and loss of mass, are primarily dependent on temperature and precipitation, but also on
solar radiation, humidity, and wind speed. Location, orientation, and exposure of the
glacier are also important, particularly for the smaller valley glaciers. The energy
budget or balance of a glaciers surface reflects how much heat energy is received or
lost from a glacier and whether evaporation or melting can occur. The energy budget
explains in quantitative terms what is termed the microclimate of a glacier. The large ice sheets can provide
information about climate conditions over the past several hundred thousand years. Cores
drilled deep down into the ice in Greenland and Antarctica allow the reconstruction of
past climates since the analysis of successively deeper layers of ice yields information
such as the atmospheric temperature at the time the ice was first deposited as snow. Dust
layers from known volcanic eruptions provide reliable age determinations; ice that lies
beneath a known dust layer is older, while dust that lies above is younger. Analysis of
the ice itself and of the air bubbles trapped in the ice allows deductions about the
composition of the atmosphere at the time when the ice was deposited. Himalayan Glacier Study About two decades ago
the Royal Nepal Academy of Science and Technology (RONAST)
had carried out extensive exercise to set
up a Regional Center on snow and ice
study in Nepal. The objective of
the proposed CENTER was to develop cooperation
among the countries of the Himalayan
region for glaciological research in the mountain
range of the Himalaya. The CENTER was
expected to promote sustainable economic and
social development studies. . As such, it would
have consisted largely of application oriented
research with both scientifically and
socially valid objectives. RONAST, to take this idea
a step further, even established relationship with
Italian National Research Center (CNR) to carry
out jointly Himalayan studies. A big research
center equipped with modern facilities has
already been set up near the base camp
of the Mount Everest at Lobouche. Snow and ice, representing both
valuable resources and natural hazards are significant
elements of the world hydrological systems, which
occur subject to tremendous variations in space
and time. Nowhere change is more significant than in the
advancing and retreating tides of snow and ice.
The RONAST was hoping that the proposed
Regional Center on Snow and Ice would be
engaged in scientific studies of the snow
and ice balance of individual catchments and of
regional groupings of catchments forming the
headwaters of major Himalayan rivers. The proposed regional center
was also to promote sustainable economic and
social development. As such, it would have
consisted largely of applications oriented studies
with both scientifically and socially valid
objectives. Hydropower development has an enormous
potential for the Himalayan region.
Effective site analysis, as well as decisions
on scale of capital installation, depend on
determination of annual water supply and
its seasonal variation. In addition, glacier-fed rivers are
notorious for their very high sediment load. This, of
course, relate to the rate of reservoir
sedimentation and rate of cavitation damage to
turbines. Response to these problems can be
made through dam, reservoir, and penstock intake design,
which in turn will be influenced by
detailed glacio-hydrological studies. Glacier Lake Outburst
Floods At present glaciers are retreating in the
Himalayan region, as a result, glaciers lakes are being formed.
Such ephemeral lakes disrupt communication systems and
various infrastructures like hydropower directly, or
indirectly subjecting the mainstream to periodic
catastrophic floods. Glacier lake outburst floods also
produce peaks in sediment transfer. On August 4th 1985 the
nearly completed Namche hydropower plant was
completely destroyed by the Dig Tsho glacier
lake outburst flood( GLOF). The Dig Tsho glacier was
on the terminus of the Langmoche Glacier. The
GLOF damaged not only the entire Namche
Hydropower station but also all the bridges, trails, cultivation
fields, houses, livestock along its path
to the confluence of the Dudh-Kosi and the
Sun-Kosi rivers at a distance of 90 km
from the Dig Tsho glacier. In 1988 for the first
time a joint team of Sino-Nepalese conducted
the studies of the glaciers and glacier
lakes in the Arun and the Sun-Kosi basins
primarily in the Tibetan region of China.
The Lanzhou Institute of Glaciology and Geocryology took
part in the study from the Chinese side,
similarly the Water and Energy Commission took part from the Nepalese
side. The field investigation team used satellite
imagery data to locate the lakes and to estimate
their dimensions as well as their morphological
characteristics. In Arun basin there are 737 glaciers in
Tibet, whose total water storage is estimated to be 121 billion
cu. m. It was found that there are 229
glacier lakes with a total storage volume
of 1.23 billion cu. m out such glacier
lakes 24 are potentially dangerous. Similarly
there are 45 glacier lakes in the
Sun-Kosi basin with a total storage volume of
388 million cu. m out of them 10 are
potentially dangerous. In 1990s Dr. Tomomi
Yamada of Japan and Dr. B.P. Upadhyay, Professor
of TU were involved in the study of
glacier lakes within Nepal The study was
conducted under the Water and Energy
Commission. Their study covered Lower Barun, Chamlang Tsho,
Naulekh, Sabai Tsho, Dudh Kund, Mojang, Tsho Rolpa, Duwo, Thulagi, Khyimjung and
Kang Guru glacier lakes. (Dr. Thapa writes on
water resources) |
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