Global clustering of recent glacier surges from radar backscatter data, 2017–2022

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Abstract

Using global Sentinel-1 radar backscatter data, we systematically map the locations of glaciers with surge-type activity during 2017–22. Patterns of pronounced increases or decreases in the strongest backscatter between two winter seasons often indicate large changes in glacier crevassing, which we treat here as a sign of surge-type activity. Validations against velocity time series, terminus advances and crevassing found in optical satellite images confirm the robustness of this approach. We find 115 surge-type events globally between 2017 and 2022, around 100 of which on glaciers already know as surge-type. Our data reveal a pronounced spatial clustering in three regions, (i) Karakoram, Pamirs and Western Kunlun Shan (∼50 surges), (ii) Svalbard (∼25) and (iii) Yukon/Alaska (∼9), with only a few other scattered surges elsewhere. This spatial clustering is significantly more pronounced than the overall global clustering of known surge-type glaciers. The 2017–22 clustering may point to climatic forcing of surge initiation.

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APA

Kääb, A., Bazilova, V., Leclercq, P. W., Mannerfelt, E. S., & Strozzi, T. (2023). Global clustering of recent glacier surges from radar backscatter data, 2017–2022. Journal of Glaciology, 69(277), 1515–1523. https://doi.org/10.1017/jog.2023.35

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