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spotlogo2.jpg (6318 bytes) VOL. 23, NO. 37, APR 02 -  APR 08  2004 ( CHAITRA 20, 2060 )
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 Earth’s 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 Earth’s 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 sun’s   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 glacier’s 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 glacier’s 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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