1. Introduction
Glacier and snow melt in High-Mountain Asia (HMA) provide essential water resources to one of the most densely populated regions in the world (e.g. Immerzeel and others, Reference Immerzeel2020). Current glacier mass loss in High-Mountain Asia accounts for $\sim \!8\%$ of the total land ice sea level rise contribution (excluding the ice sheets) (Hugonnet and others, Reference Hugonnet2021). The majority of glaciers in High-Mountain Asia are losing mass (e.g. Maurer and others, Reference Maurer, Schaefer, Rupper and Corley2019; Shean and others, Reference Shean2020; Hugonnet and others, Reference Hugonnet2021) as global and regional temperatures continue to rise (e.g. Hansen and others, Reference Hansen2006; Lalande and others, Reference Lalande, Ménégoz, Krinner, Naegeli and Wunderle2021). This mass loss is projected to continue in the future (e.g. Kraaijenbrink and others, Reference Kraaijenbrink, Bierkens, Lutz and Immerzeel2017; Huss and Hock, Reference Huss and Hock2018; Rounce and others, Reference Rounce, Hock and Shean2020a), with a recent study suggesting that even if global temperature is limited to $1.5^\circ$C above pre-industrial levels, 46% of current glacier mass in High-Mountain Asia will be lost by 2100 (Rounce and others, Reference Rounce2023).
Supraglacial debris modifies the fundamental relationship between climate and glacier surface mass balance (SMB). However, the effects of debris cover on SMB are still poorly understood, especially at fine spatial scales. Debris covers approximately 30% of the ablation area of High-Mountain Asia glaciers (e.g. Scherler and others, Reference Scherler, Wulf and Gorelick2018; Herreid and Pellicciotti, Reference Herreid and Pellicciotti2020), with significant surface heterogeneity and short-scale variations in debris thickness and properties (i.e. lithology, grain size). Thicker debris cover effectively insulates the underlying ice and reduces ablation (potentially by more than 50% for debris thickness $\gtrsim$10 cm), while thin debris cover can decrease surface albedo and enhance ablation (e.g. Östrem, Reference Östrem1959; Mihalcea and others, Reference Mihalcea2006; Nicholson and Benn, Reference Nicholson and Benn2006; Kraaijenbrink and others, Reference Kraaijenbrink, Bierkens, Lutz and Immerzeel2017).
The presence and spatial distribution of exposed, steep ice cliffs (e.g. Sakai and others, Reference Sakai, Nakawo and Fujita2002) and supraglacial ponds (e.g. Sakai and others, Reference Sakai, Takeuchi, Fujita and Nakawo2000) further complicates relationships between debris thickness and ablation rates (e.g. Benn and others, Reference Benn2012; Racoviteanu and others, Reference Racoviteanu2022). Exposed ice cliffs generally have higher ablation rates as they intercept outgoing longwave radiation from surrounding debris (e.g. Buri and others, Reference Buri, Pellicciotti, Steiner, Miles and Immerzeel2016), which is especially true for south-facing cliffs that also directly receive incoming shortwave radiation (e.g. Buri and Pellicciotti, Reference Buri and Pellicciotti2018). Supraglacial ponds absorb additional heat due to their low albedo (e.g. Miles and others, Reference Miles2018a), which increases local ablation and sustains ice cliffs around their edges (e.g. Benn and others, Reference Benn, Wiseman and Hands2001; Watson and others, Reference Watson2017b; Steiner and others, Reference Steiner, Buri, Miles, Ragettli and Pellicciotti2019; Kneib and others, Reference Kneib2022). Despite their importance, studying these features has proven difficult with available coarse satellite observations due to their small size and transient nature (e.g. Brun and others, Reference Brun2018; Anderson and others, Reference Anderson, Armstrong, Anderson and Buri2021a).
Most geodetic glacier mass-balance measurement approaches involve analysis of surface elevation differences between co-registered medium- to high-resolution digital elevation models (DEMs) using a fixed Eulerian grid (e.g. Brun and others, Reference Brun, Berthier, Wagnon, Kääb and Treichler2017; Shean and others, Reference Shean2020; Hugonnet and others, Reference Hugonnet2021). While this simplifies analysis, local elevation change signals (e.g. ice cliff retreat) are obscured in an Eulerian reference frame due to ice flow and advection of rough surface features (e.g. Thompson and others, Reference Thompson, Benn, Mertes and Luckman2016). Furthermore, Eulerian measurements inherently capture surface elevation change due to both vertical ice flow (emergence from flux divergence) and SMB (e.g. Cuffey and Paterson, Reference Cuffey and Paterson2010; Berthier and Vincent, Reference Berthier and Vincent2012; Miles and others, Reference Miles2021; Zeller and others, Reference Zeller2022). Understanding the relative contributions of these two components is challenging, especially for coarse products with limited vertical accuracy/precision over shorter time intervals. As a result, geodetic mass balance is typically computed using aggregated Eulerian elevation change rates spanning longer time periods (i.e. decades).
Isolating the surface mass-balance component from observed elevation change is essential for understanding glacier sensitivity to climate forcing (e.g. Miles and others, Reference Miles2021) and calibrating glacier mass-balance models (e.g. Huss and Hock, Reference Huss and Hock2015; Zekollari and Huybrechts, Reference Zekollari and Huybrechts2018; Rounce and others, Reference Rounce, Hock and Shean2020a; Schuster and others, Reference Schuster, Rounce and Maussion2023). These glacier evolution models are often used to understand the drivers of current glacier change and produce policy-relevant projections of glacier change under different emission scenarios. While models can be calibrated for individual glaciers using in situ measurements (e.g. automated weather station data, ablation stakes), many regional models continue to rely on annualized glacier-wide average mass-balance estimates from long-term geodetic elevation change measurements (e.g. Kraaijenbrink and others, Reference Kraaijenbrink, Bierkens, Lutz and Immerzeel2017; Rounce and others, Reference Rounce, Hock and Shean2020a). Reliance on a single observation for calibration can lead to model overparameterization (e.g. Rounce and others, Reference Rounce2020b), which is a major source of uncertainty in projections at the individual glacier scale (Rounce and others, Reference Rounce, Hock and Shean2020a). Additionally, most glacier evolution models do not account for spatially variable ablation rates due to ice cliffs and melt ponds on debris-covered glaciers (e.g. Ferguson and Vieli, Reference Ferguson and Vieli2021; Racoviteanu and others, Reference Racoviteanu2022). A notable exception is the study conducted by Kraaijenbrink and others (Reference Kraaijenbrink, Bierkens, Lutz and Immerzeel2017), which included melt enhancement factors for supraglacial ponds in their mass-balance model, but did not explicitly discuss their influence on modeled melt rates.
Isolating the seasonal components of SMB (i.e. summer and winter balance) is also needed to better understand the timing and magnitude of glacier meltwater runoff and associated contributions to river discharge. High-resolution, distributed seasonal mass-balance observations would fill a major gap in existing calibration data used by glacier evolution models and improve their seasonal predictive capabilities. Unfortunately, many of the issues mentioned above for geodetic mass-balance calculations are exacerbated for shorter seasonal time periods.
1.1. Previous work involving glacier surface mass-balance estimation from DEMs
Several recent studies isolated the SMB component of mountain glacier elevation change over seasonal to decadal time periods using remote-sensing observations (Table 1). In most cases, remotely sensed elevation and velocity observations were combined with ice thickness estimates from models and/or ice-penetrating radar (IPR) surveys to estimate the SMB using the continuity equation (e.g. Hubbard and others, Reference Hubbard2000).
Gridded glacier surface elevation measurements were derived from stereo/SfM processing of the image source(s) listed, and horizontal surface velocity measurements were derived from feature tracking of orthoimages or shaded relief maps for the source(s) listed.
a Vincent and others (Reference Vincent2016).
b Seasonal glacier-wide mass balance only.
c Farinotti and others (Reference Farinotti2019).
d DEM derived from interpolation of digitized 1957 contour map (Das and others, Reference Das, Hock, Berthier and Lingle2014).
e Estimated from DEM slope and surface velocity using Shallow Ice Approximation (SIA).
f Combination of Consensus estimates and OGGM (Maussion and others, Reference Maussion2019) model output, calibrated using IPR transects (Pelto and others, Reference Pelto, Maussion, Menounos, Radic and Zeuner2020).
g Interpolated from IPR transects (Zekollari and others, Reference Zekollari, Huybrechts, Fürst, Rybak and Eisen2013; Langhammer and others, Reference Langhammer, Grab, Bauder and Maurer2019).
h Flux divergence was determined using three methods: (1) stake measurements at specific points, (2) by adjusting the surface elevation change profile obtained from annual DEM differencing with the long-term modeled surface mass-balance profile, and (3) by correcting the surface elevation change products for the winter period using end-of-winter IPR-derived snow depth and modeled firn compaction rates.
These studies show that DEMs derived from Unoccupied Aerial Vehicle (UAV), Structure-from-Motion (SfM) and Airborne Laser Scanning (ALS) surveys with centimeter-scale geolocation accuracy and sub-meter-scale spatial resolution can provide useful seasonal and annual SMB measurements. Though DEMs derived from currently available very-high-resolution satellite stereo images cannot match this accuracy and resolution, they offer much greater spatial coverage, and large archives spanning the past few decades offer the potential to scale these methods for remote and inaccessible regions. Aside from early work by Brun and others (Reference Brun2018), to our knowledge, flow-corrected satellite stereo DEMs have not previously been used to study the seasonal mass balance of large, fast-flowing (>10 m a−1) debris-covered glaciers.
1.2. Study objectives
We developed methods to estimate glacier SMB from very-high-resolution satellite stereo images. We used these methods and the resulting high-resolution SMB products to address two main research questions in the monsoon-dominated regions of the Central Himalayas:
(1) How do surface features (e.g. local debris thickness variations, and ice cliffs) influence debris-covered glacier ablation rates?
(2) What are the spatial patterns of seasonal accumulation and ablation over debris-covered glaciers?
We highlight several results that offer new insights into these questions, consider the current limitations of our methods and summarize the future potential to scale for regional analysis.
2. Study sites
We focus our study on debris-covered glaciers located in the Central Himalayan mountain range in Nepal. The region is tectonically active (e.g. Nakata, Reference Nakata1989), with high rates of uplift (e.g. Lavé and Avouac, Reference Lavé and Avouac2001) and erosion (e.g. Marc and others, Reference Marc2019), which provides an abundant supply of loose rock material with variable particle sizes to sustain debris-covered glaciers (e.g. McCarthy and others, Reference McCarthy2022; Racoviteanu and others, Reference Racoviteanu2022). The regional climate is heavily influenced by the Indian summer monsoon from June to September (e.g. Webster and others, Reference Webster1998; Wang and Lin, Reference Wang and Lin2002), which typically involves heavy rain at lower elevations, and snow accumulation at high elevations (e.g. Ageta and Higuchi, Reference Ageta and Higuchi1984; Perry and others, Reference Perry2020). The monsoon season coincides with the boreal summer extending from May to October, followed by a cold and dry winter from November to March (e.g. Stumm and others, Reference Stumm, Joshi, Gurung and Silwal2021; Pelto and others, Reference Pelto, Panday, Matthews, Maurer and Perry2021). Glaciers in the region are generally classified as ‘summer accumulation type’, and they are more sensitive to summer air temperature than the more conventional ‘winter accumulation type’ glaciers found in most mid- to high-latitude regions (e.g. Naito, Reference Naito2011; Sakai and Fujita, Reference Sakai and Fujita2017).
We identified six well-documented debris-covered glaciers in Nepal as study sites: Ngozumpa, Khumbu, Changri Nup and Imja Lhotse Shar glaciers in the Sagarmatha National Park, and Langtang and Lirung glaciers in the Langtang National Park (Fig. 1, Table 2). These glaciers vary in size (2–70 km2), debris cover thickness and extent (partially to fully debris-covered) and geometry (single trunk to multiple tributaries), allowing us to test our methods and analyze results for a representative set of the wide range of debris-covered glaciers in the region.
a Randolph Glacier Inventory (RGI) v6.0 identifier (Pfeffer and others, Reference Pfeffer2014; RGI Consortium, Reference RGI2017).
b From RGI v6.0.
c From RGI v6.0.
d Computed using debris cover extents from Scherler and others (Reference Scherler, Wulf and Gorelick2018).
e 5th, 16th, 50th, 84th, 95th percentile of debris thickness products from Rounce and others (Reference Rounce2021).
3. Data
3.1. Very-high-resolution optical stereo images, DEMs and velocity maps
We obtained archived cloud-free Level-1B Maxar WorldView-01/02/03 and GeoEye-01 panchromatic stereo images with ground sample distance (GSD) of ~0.3–0.5 m for our study sites. These in-track stereo images were collected between December 2012 and December 2017 (Table S1).
3.1.1. Stereo DEM generation
We used v3.0.1-alpha (Alexandrov and others, Reference Alexandrov2022) of the NASA Ames Stereo Pipeline (Shean and others, Reference Shean2016; Beyer and others, Reference Beyer, Alexandrov and McMichael2018) to prepare DEMs for each in-track stereo pair listed in Table S1. We followed the ‘map-project’ workflow of Shean and others (Reference Shean2016), orthorectifying input stereo images to a common resolution and extent using a smoothed, gap-filled version of the 8-m HiMAT DEM composite (Shean and others, Reference Shean2020). We used the ‘fine-quality’ stereo processing settings outlined in Bhushan and Shean (Reference Bhushan and Shean2021) to resolve meter-scale surface features. The output DEMs were posted at 2 m resolution in the Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) Zone 45N projection (EPSG:32645), with heights relative to the WGS84 ellipsoid.
We performed a relative co-registration step to align all DEMs for each site over non-glacierized, static surfaces using the Iterative Closest Point (ICP) point-to-plane algorithm (Pomerleau and others, Reference Pomerleau, Colas, Siegwart and Magnenat2013) implemented in ASP. We used the resulting transformation matrices to update the corresponding camera models for each stereo pair (following Bhushan and others, Reference Bhushan, Shean, Alexandrov and Henderson2021) and prepared orthorectified images with improved geolocation accuracy for subsequent analysis.
3.1.2. Surface velocity map generation
We prepared horizontal surface velocity products for each glacier by tracking moving features in pairs of shaded relief maps. Unlike the original panchromatic images, the shaded relief maps are unaffected by changes in surface albedo (e.g. surface snow cover) and illumination. Using shaded relief maps also allows our workflow to be adapted for other high-resolution DEM products distributed without corresponding very-high-resolution orthoimages (e.g. ArcticDEM (Porter and others, Reference Porter2018), REMA (Howat and others, Reference Howat, Porter, Smith, Noh and Morin2019), EarthDEM (Porter and others, Reference Porter2022)).
We used the ‘combined shading’ algorithm implemented in the gdaldem hillshade utility to prepare shaded relief maps for all co-registered 2 m DEM products. This approach uses a combination of local slopes and oblique shading to enhance detail over a broader range of slope and aspect values than traditional hillshade algorithms. Pairs of shaded relief maps were processed using the ASP parallel_stereo program in correlator mode. Dense image correlation was performed using the More Global Matching (MGM, Facciolo and others (Reference Facciolo, Franchis and Meinhardt2015)) algorithm with a 9 × 9 px kernel, and subpixel refinement was achieved by fitting a 4th order polynomial to the initial disparity values using a 15 × 15 px SGM_poly4 kernel (Miclea and others, Reference Miclea, Vancea and Nedevschi2015).
The resulting dense, 2-D disparity maps were then filtered using a two-stage procedure: a median filter (41 × 41 px kernel) to remove outliers, followed by an adaptive moving-average smoothing filter (maximum kernel size 25 × 25 px, ASP scale factor 0.50). This smoothing operation reduced noise in the disparity products stemming from DEM artifacts (e.g. Kraaijenbrink and others, Reference Kraaijenbrink2016a), local ice cliff backwasting (e.g. Rounce and others, Reference Rounce, King, McCarthy, Shean and Salerno2018) and surface feature changes unrelated to glacier flow (e.g. surface pond expansion). We found the default filtering approach to be too aggressive for the relatively slow Lirung Glacier (~4 m a−1), so we used a smaller median filter (15 × 15 px kernel) to remove outliers while also preserving viable disparity measurements.
The filtered disparity values (units of pixels) were converted to surface velocity values in m a−1 based on the spatial resolution and temporal baseline of the input DEMs. Residual data gaps in the velocity maps were filled with a 51 × 51 px NaN-aware Gaussian kernel, followed by a final manual quality control review to mask any lingering artifacts.
3.2. Ice thickness estimates
Accurate, spatially distributed ice thickness estimates are essential for many glaciological applications, including computing flux divergence. Ideally, one would use dense grids of ice thickness measurements derived from in situ measurements (e.g. IPR; Sharp and others, Reference Sharp1993; Hubbard and others, Reference Hubbard2000; Van Tricht and others, Reference Van Tricht2021a). However, such measurements are sparse and limited to only a few glaciers in High-Mountain Asia (e.g. Pritchard and others, Reference Pritchard2020; Welty and others, Reference Welty2020).
We used ice thickness estimates prepared by Farinotti and others (Reference Farinotti2019), a consensus product derived from four different approaches based on Glen's flow law and the shallow ice approximation. To estimate ice thickness, these four approaches either invert the SMB gradient to match the volumetric change in ice flux (e.g. Huss and Farinotti, Reference Huss and Farinotti2012; Maussion and others, Reference Maussion2019), or rely on empirical relationships between observed surface slope and characteristic basal shear stress (e.g. Frey and others, Reference Frey2014; Fürst and others, Reference Fürst2017). Figure S1 shows maps of consensus ice thickness estimates and the per-pixel standard deviation of the four input ice thickness model outputs for our study glaciers. Several previous studies show that the consensus ice thickness products can provide reasonable estimates of flux divergence for individual glaciers (e.g. Miles and others, Reference Miles2021; Pelto and others, Reference Pelto, Panday, Matthews, Maurer and Perry2021; Steiner and others, Reference Steiner, Kraaijenbrink and Immerzeel2021; Mishra and others, Reference Mishra2022).
3.3. Debris-cover extent and thickness
We utilized gridded debris thickness products from Rounce and others (Reference Rounce2021) to examine the effect of debris thickness on ice ablation for our study glaciers. The debris thickness products were derived using thermal infrared images from Landsat-8, and a combination of sub-debris ablation and surface temperature inversion models for glacier areas identified as debris-covered by Scherler and others (Reference Scherler, Wulf and Gorelick2018). The uncertainty of the debris thickness estimates varies as a function of the observed debris thickness, with higher uncertainty expected for thicker debris (see Fig. S5 and Table S4 in Rounce and others, Reference Rounce2021).
4. Methods
To assess the influence of surface features on ice ablation over annual time scales (Objective 1), we analyzed DEM pairs with temporal baselines of approximately 1 or 2 years (Table S1), ensuring that our observations included at least one full summer and winter season. Ngozumpa Glacier had the longest temporal baseline between DEM observations (2.08 years), while Langtang Glacier had the shortest (0.87 years). To assess patterns of seasonal accumulation and ablation (Objective 2), we computed elevation change from DEM pairs with shorter temporal baselines spanning the summer and winter seasons for Black Changri Nup and Lirung Glacier (Table S1).
We now describe the detailed methodology used to prepare and validate our SMB estimates. We begin with a theoretical framework, and then outline each step in our data processing and analysis workflow, including Lagrangian SMB calculation, uncertainty propagation, ice cliff delineation and aggregation.
4.1. Theory: isolating surface mass balance from elevation change with Lagrangian specification
Assuming a constant, incompressible ice column density beneath the seasonal snow layer (e.g. Zeller and others, Reference Zeller2022), fixed bed elevation, negligible firn compaction and negligible englacial and basal mass balance, the Eulerian specification for the surface elevation change of an ice column (${\partial h\over \partial t}$, units of m a−1) can be defined by the continuity equation (Equation 8.77 in Cuffey and Paterson, Reference Cuffey and Paterson2010):
where h is the surface elevation above datum (m), $\dot {b}$ is the specific SMB rate (${\rm {kg\over m^{2}.yr}}$), which is equal to the net mass change per unit area added by accumulation and/or removed by ablation, ρ is the bulk density of the material added or removed from the surface (kg m−3), H is the ice thickness (m), and ${\boldsymbol {\bar u}}$ is the column-averaged horizontal velocity vector (m a−1). The $\nabla \cdot ( H\bar {{\boldsymbol u}})$ term represents the ice flux divergence, which accounts for the vertical elevation change due to ice flow (m a−1) into or out of the ice column. Flux divergence is typically negative for compressional flow, resulting in thickening of the ice column and emergence. Negative flux divergence is generally expected over the ablation area, downstream of icefalls or upstream of bed obstacles which are large relative to the local ice thickness. Flux divergence is positive for extensional flow, resulting in thinning of the ice column and submergence. Positive flux divergence is expected in the accumulation area, upstream of icefalls and downstream of bed obstacles.
Remote-sensing observations can directly measure the surface elevation change rate (${\partial h\over \partial t}$) and horizontal surface velocity vector (us). The latter can be used to estimate the column-averaged horizontal velocity:
where f is the ratio of the depth-averaged horizontal velocity and the horizontal surface velocity. Assuming Glen's flow law with exponent n = 3 and negligible basal sliding, f ≈ 0.8 (Eq. 8.36 in Cuffey and Paterson, Reference Cuffey and Paterson2010; Cogley and others, Reference Cogley2011), and we use this constant throughout our study.
Substituting Eqn (2) into Eqn (1) and rearranging, we obtain an equation for SMB as a function of surface elevation change rate, horizontal surface velocity and ice thickness:
The Eulerian surface elevation change rate (${\partial h\over \partial t}$) includes signals due to advection of short-scale surface roughness (e.g. boulders, ice cliffs, crevasses) superimposed on long-wavelength signals from SMB and ice flux divergence. This phenomenon manifests as alternating positive and negative elevation change signals, with magnitude and spatial scale dependent on feature dimensions, orientation and displacement distance.
To remove these apparent elevation change signals, we calculate the Lagrangian specification for surface elevation change (${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}$, m a−1), effectively following individual surface features using known horizontal displacements from surface velocity observations and measuring local surface elevation change. The Lagrangian surface elevation change rate (${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}$) is related to the Eulerian surface elevation change rate (${\partial h\over \partial t}$) by the material derivative equation:
The term ${\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}\cdot {\nabla h}$ in Eqn (4) accounts for the expected elevation change due to slope-parallel flow – the elevation decrease of a surface feature as it moves downslope, independent of local surface thinning or thickening due to SMB or flux divergence.
Rearranging Eqn (4) and substituting into Eqn (3), we obtain an equation for the Lagrangian SMB rate (${\dot {b}\over \rho }$) in m a−1 as a function of the slope-corrected Lagrangian elevation change rate and flux divergence:
For the remainder of the manuscript, we refer to ${\partial h\over \partial t}$ as Eulerian elevation change rate, ${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t} - {\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}\cdot {\nabla h}$ as slope-corrected Lagrangian elevation change rate, and ${\dot {b}\over \rho }$ as Lagrangian SMB rate. Unless otherwise specified, all values are reported in units of m a−1.
4.1.1. Density considerations and assumptions
We chose to preserve the density (ρ) term in the denominator of our final definition for the Lagrangian SMB rate (${\dot {b}\over \rho }$), so that all terms have comparable units of meters per year (m a−1). Given our study objectives, this approach avoids the need of spatially variable surface material density in the accumulation areas, which are not well constrained. Our Lagrangian SMB rate estimates can be interpreted as meters ice equivalent (i.e. m a−1) over ablation areas, as the material density will be equal to the density of glacier ice (e.g. Van Tricht and others, Reference Van Tricht2021b) and can be used to directly estimate ice ablation rates. Using common density values for glacier ice (900–917 kg m−3; e.g. Cogley and others, Reference Cogley2011; Huss, Reference Huss2013; Kääb and others, Reference Kääb, Berthier, Nuth, Gardelle and Arnaud2012), our Lagrangian SMB rate products can be converted to SMB estimates in ${{\rm kg}\over {\rm m}^{2}.{\rm yr}}$ over ablation areas.
To assess the spatial patterns of seasonal accumulation, we also present the same Lagrangian SMB rate estimates over the limited portions of accumulation areas with available product coverage. Conversion to ${{\rm kg}\over {\rm m}^{2}.{\rm yr}}$ in accumulation areas is more complicated, as bulk density of surface snow and firn may vary spatially (e.g. Zeller and others, Reference Zeller2022). We assume that the firn column represents a small fraction of the total ice thickness, and assume a constant ice column density over time. This condition allows us to assume negligible firn compaction rates during the study period (Cogley and others, Reference Cogley2011) which is true near the equilibrium line altitude and over the lower accumulation areas, where we have valid product coverage. With higher accumulation rates at higher elevations, a more sophisticated density treatment might be necessary to modify our equation and the underlying assumptions (e.g. Zeller and others, Reference Zeller2022) for improved Lagrangian SMB estimates. In summary, although Lagrangian SMB rate products contain valuable information over accumulation areas, interpretation can be challenging – we offer additional discussion in Section 6.5.5.
4.2. Lagrangian surface mass-balance calculation
For each pair of DEMs, we used the corresponding filtered horizontal surface displacement product (Section 3.1.2) to back-project elevation pixels in the second DEM to their expected initial position in the first DEM grid (e.g. Van Tricht and others, Reference Van Tricht2021b; Shean and others, Reference Shean, Joughin, Dutrieux, Smith and Berthier2019). We subtracted the first DEM elevation value from the corresponding second DEM elevation value at each pixel and divided by the time interval to measure the local Lagrangian elevation change rate (${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}$), effectively removing any apparent elevation change signals due to advection of rough surface features. This approach maintains the direct per-pixel correspondence between ${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}$ and us values for the same observation period, which is essential for continuity and detailed analysis of surface features.
The choice of back-projecting pixels in the second DEM to their initial locations or forward-projecting pixels in the first DEM to their final locations before subtraction will not impact the ${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}$ magnitude for short time intervals, but it will determine the location where the ${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}$ value is assigned. Our study includes Lhotse Shar Glacier which calves into the Imja Lake, so we used the back-projection approach to preserve ${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}$ values near the terminus.
4.2.1. Slope-parallel elevation change
Using the same displacement product, we forward-projected pixels from the first DEM to their expected final position on the second DEM acquisition date. We sampled the first DEM at this final expected location. We then subtracted this elevation value from the initial elevation value in the first DEM to obtain the expected slope-parallel elevation change, and divided by the time interval to obtain the ‘expected slope-parallel elevation change rate’ ${\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}\cdot {\nabla h}$ (m a−1).
Our approach to estimate ${\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}\cdot {\nabla h}$ differs from those used by Brun and others (Reference Brun2018) and Van Tricht and others (Reference Van Tricht2021b), which combine horizontal surface velocity measurements from one time period and surface elevation gradient (slope) measurements from a non-contemporaneous DEM (e.g. SRTM from February 2001, or a DEM composite from observations over an extended period). Any real surface elevation change between the periods when us and $\nabla h$ were measured will introduce errors in the resulting slope-corrected Lagrangian elevation change rate measurements. Our approach more accurately captures the true surface gradients during the observation period when we have contemporaneous surface velocity and elevation change measurements.
4.2.2. Flux divergence
We computed ice flux for each pixel in the first DEM grid coordinate system as the product of the column-averaged horizontal velocity vector and the ice thickness from the Farinotti and others (Reference Farinotti2019) consensus product (Section 3.2). The flux divergence (${\rm f}\nabla \cdot ( H{\boldsymbol u}_{\rm s}$)) was then computed from the spatial gradients of this ice flux product using the numpy gradient operator (central difference, except near array boundaries).
4.2.3. Length scale considerations and ice-thickness-dependent smoothing
Ice flow is primarily governed by surface slope and longitudinal driving stress over length scales that are proportional to several times the local ice thickness (e.g. Kamb and Echelmeyer, Reference Kamb and Echelmeyer1986; Cuffey and Paterson, Reference Cuffey and Paterson2010; Alley and others, Reference Alley2018). Therefore, we must use appropriate length scales when computing the expected slope-parallel elevation change and flux divergence, rather than the original DEM resolution. Previous studies used either a fixed distance between flux gates (e.g. Bisset and others, Reference Bisset2020; Miles and others, Reference Miles2021) or a constant multiplicative factor l of 2–8 times the local ice thickness to compute longitudinal stress or flux divergence for mountain glaciers (Dehecq and others, Reference Dehecq2019; Van Tricht and others, Reference Van Tricht2021b; Armstrong and others, Reference Armstrong2022; Van Wyk de Vries and others, Reference Van Wyk de Vries, Carchipulla-Morales, Wickert and Minaya2022).
We used a value of l = 5 times the local ice thickness to assign the spatially variable kernel width for a custom 2-D Gaussian filter, and then used this filter to smooth the expected slope-parallel elevation change rate and flux divergence products (Fig. 2). This empirically derived choice of l reduced artifacts while preserving physically meaningful signals in these products for our study glaciers.
4.2.4. Annual Lagrangian surface mass-balance rate
The final Lagrangian SMB rate (${\dot {b}\over \rho }$) was calculated from the Lagrangian elevation change rate (${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}$), and the smoothed expected slope-parallel elevation change rate (${\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}\cdot {\nabla h}$) and flux divergence (${\rm f}\nabla \cdot ( H{\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}})$) products using Eqn (5).
4.2.5. Seasonal Lagrangian surface mass balance
For the seasonal products, we report Lagrangian SMB (${b\over \rho }$) with units of meters. Note the absence of a dot, as this is not a rate. This approach is more appropriate for observed seasonal elevation change over the shorter ~4–6 month intervals, rather than the annualized rates for the longer ~1–2 year intervals. The flux divergence was calculated using seasonal velocity products derived from the same DEMs used to compute the seasonal Lagrangian ${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}$.
4.2.6. Evaluation
To ensure that our slope-parallel flow correction and adaptive smoothing approaches did not violate mass conservation principles, we compared several metrics before and after each correction and filtering step, assuming they should be equal. To ensure that our thickness-dependent Gaussian smoothing filter conserved mass, we compared the mean flux divergence (${\rm f}\nabla \cdot ( H{\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}})$) before and after filtering, and the mean expected slope-parallel elevation change rate (${\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}\cdot {\nabla h}$) before and after filtering. To ensure that our Lagrangian framework conserved mass, we compared the mean Eulerian ${{\rm d}h\over {\rm d}t}$ and mean slope-corrected Lagrangian ${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}$ for the common area with valid coverage in both products.
In principle, a similar comparison can be performed between the mean Eulerian ${{\rm d}h\over {\rm d}t}$ and the mean Lagrangian SMB rate to validate the flux divergence correction, assuming both products have complete spatial coverage over the glacier. However, the Lagrangian SMB rate maps typically have data gaps over accumulation areas and more continuous coverage over ablation areas, where we expect non-zero flux divergence due to net emergence. Despite this limitation, we performed this additional validation test for Black Changri Nup and Lirung Glaciers, where both products have near-complete coverage.
4.3. Uncertainty estimates
Estimating the uncertainty of our final Lagrangian SMB rate products is complicated by the variety of input datasets with spatially variable error and the lack of available in situ measurements. Several processing steps (e.g. feature tracking to derive horizontal surface velocity, flow correction of elevation change rates) and some of our simplifying assumptions (e.g. contribution of basal sliding to observed surface velocity) can introduce additional error.
Despite these challenges, we conservatively estimate the Lagrangian SMB uncertainty ($\sigma _{{\dot {b}\over \rho }}$) as the combined uncertainty of the two main components in Eqn 5 for each pixel on the glacier:
where uncertainty of the ice flux (Hfus) is:
and the uncertainty of the ice flux divergence (${\rm f}\nabla \cdot ( H{\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}})$) is:
To estimate $\sigma _{{{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t} - {\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}\cdot {\nabla h}}$, we computed the systematic and random error of the slope-corrected Lagrangian elevation change rate products (${{{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t} - {\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}\cdot {\nabla h}}$) as the median and normalized median absolute deviation (NMAD) of residuals over non-glacierized, static surfaces, where we assume zero elevation change. The combined $\sigma _{{{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t} - {\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}\cdot {\nabla h}}$ is the root sum of the squared median and NMAD values. The same approach involving observed errors over static surfaces was used to estimate the uncertainty of the surface velocity products ($\sigma _{{\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}}$). While these $\sigma _{{{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t} - {\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}\cdot {\nabla h}}$ and $\sigma _{{\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}}$ values were estimated over terrain around the glacier, we assume that they capture similar uncertainty for the same products over the glacier surface. Finally, we estimated ice thickness uncertainty (σ H) as the per-pixel weighted standard deviation of four ice thickness grids used to derive the consensus ice thickness estimates (Farinotti and others, Reference Farinotti2019). The resulting grids capture the spatial variability of ice thickness uncertainty for each glacier (Fig. S1). We substituted the uncertainty estimates for these components into Eqns (6)–(8) to obtain the Lagrangian SMB uncertainty ($\sigma _{{\dot {b}\over \rho }}$) for each of our study glaciers.
4.4. Identifying areas affected by ice cliff ablation and retreat
Several methods to map ice cliffs on debris-covered glaciers have been proposed in recent years, with varying degrees of success. These methods typically use either differences in optical multispectral image surface reflectance values (e.g. Kraaijenbrink and others, Reference Kraaijenbrink, Shea, Pellicciotti, Jong and Immerzeel2016b; Steiner and others, Reference Steiner, Buri, Miles, Ragettli and Pellicciotti2019; Anderson and others, Reference Anderson, Armstrong, Anderson and Buri2021a; Kneib and others, Reference Kneib2021a) or surface slope and roughness values from a high-resolution DEM (e.g. Reid and Brock, Reference Reid and Brock2014; Herreid and Pellicciotti, Reference Herreid and Pellicciotti2018; King and others, Reference King, Turner, Quincey and Carrivick2020). Methods using surface reflectance values are limited by image view and solar illumination angles, as near-nadir imagery presents challenges for observing vertical cliffs. High-resolution satellite images orthorectified using outdated and/or coarse DEMs often have geolocation error and ‘smearing’ artifacts near steep features such as ice cliffs. Image-based techniques can also fail to identify ice cliffs covered by a very thin layer of debris. Methods based on DEM slope and surface roughness struggle to differentiate ice cliffs from other steep surfaces, such as moraines or debris cones. Additionally, DEMs from satellite stereo images can fail to reconstruct steep ice cliff faces, especially when the face is oriented away from one or both of the satellite view angles.
To avoid complications around ice cliff mapping, we limited our analysis to a subset of ‘ablating ice cliffs’, which we define as ice cliffs with high observed ablation rates. Our semi-automated identification approach takes advantage of the fact that ice cliffs are typically steep surfaces that melt at higher rates than their surroundings.
We segmented features with local slopes greater than 10° in both input DEMs and at least 15 connected pixels. We then used the observed slope-corrected Lagrangian ${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}$ elevation change values to remove steep, but unchanging surface features that should not be classified as ablating ice cliffs. Modeled ice cliff melt rates for glaciers in the region (Rounce and others, Reference Rounce2021; Miles and others, Reference Miles, Steiner, Buri, Immerzeel and Pellicciotti2022) typically exceed 3–7 m a−1. Based on these results and our own manual mapping efforts, we used a conservative maximum ${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}-{\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}\cdot {\nabla h}$ threshold of −2.5 m a−1 to isolate ablating ice cliffs. We then performed a manual review of corresponding orthoimages to identify and remove any remaining misclassified features.
In summary, while we do not attempt to map every ice cliff on our study glaciers (an inherently subjective and tedious process), our approach allows us to objectively isolate areas that were affected by ablation and retreat of ice cliffs, and then measure local elevation change over these areas.
4.5. Elevation-dependent aggregation and ice-cliff metrics
We computed the median, NMAD and interquartile range (IQR) of all valid pixels within 50 m elevation bins for the following products: Eulerian elevation change rate (${{\rm d}h\over {\rm d}t}$), Lagrangian elevation change rate (${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}$), slope-corrected Lagrangian elevation change rate (${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t} - {\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}\cdot {\nabla h}$), Lagrangian SMB rate (${\dot {b}\over \rho }$), debris thickness, area affected by ablating ice cliffs (A icecliff) and debris-covered area (A debris, excluding ice cliffs). All the area estimates were derived in map-view.
We computed the percent of the total debris-covered area affected by ablating ice cliffs in each bin as:
Next, we isolated the median Lagrangian SMB rate over areas affected by ablating ice cliffs (${\dot {b}}_{\rm{icecliff}}$, dropping ρ divisor for simplicity) and debris-covered surfaces (${\dot {b}}_{\rm{debris}}$, excluding areas affected by ablating ice cliffs) for each bin. We also computed the percent contribution of ablating ice cliffs to total ablation in debris-covered areas:
for bins with negative median Lagrangian SMB rate (ablation). Finally, we computed summary statistics for each glacier as the area-weighted average of these metrics for all bins within the debris-covered area.
5. Results
5.1. Surface velocity and flux divergence
The velocity products derived from shaded relief maps resolve detailed spatial velocity variations over the study glaciers (Figs 3c, S2c–S6c). In general, the glaciers have maximum surface velocity over steep icefalls. Velocity is less than 5 m a−1 over the lower debris-covered ablation areas for all glaciers except the Lhotse Shar Glacier, which terminates in Imja Lake. Residual data gaps occur over accumulation areas and some areas of fast flow due to a lack of texture (e.g. snow-covered surfaces) and/or loss of coherence between the two shaded relief maps, especially over longer time intervals.
All study glaciers have negative flux divergence (positive emergence velocity) over the majority of their debris-covered ablation areas (Figs 3d, S2d–S6d). Some local areas of positive flux divergence are observed near tributary confluence zones or along margins where the flow direction changes. Maximum emergence velocities are observed a few kilometers downstream from the areas with fastest horizontal glacier flow. All glaciers except Lhotse Shar have near-zero flux divergence over their lower debris-covered ablation areas, indicating that emergence is limited over near-stagnant areas.
5.2. Annual surface mass balance
The slope-corrected Lagrangian ${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}$ maps (Figs 3g, S2g–S2 g) do not contain the artifacts related to advection of short-scale surface features and roughness observed in the Eulerian ${{\rm d}h\over {\rm d}t}$ maps (Figs 3e, S2e–S2e). The slope-corrected Lagrangian ${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}$ maps also resolve local ablation signals over steep ice cliffs in debris-covered ablation areas (Fig. 4).
The Lagrangian SMB rate map for Imja Lhotse Shar Glacier (Fig. 3h) shows ablation signals over the northern tributary and near the calving front that were compensated by negative flux divergence (Fig. 3d) and thus not apparent in the Eulerian ${{\rm d}h\over {\rm d}t}$ map (Fig. 3e). Near the base of the northeastern tributary icefall (upper edge of valid coverage), we observe positive Lagrangian SMB rates indicating surface accumulation (Fig. 3h). Isolated positive Lagrangian SMB rates are also observed over melt ponds and near the confluence of Lhotse Shar and Imja Glacier.
The Eulerian and Lagrangian products appear similar over the relatively slow-moving Black Changri Nup (Fig. S3) and Lirung Glaciers (Fig. S5). The Lagrangian SMB rate products show relatively low ablation rates over the stagnant, debris-covered areas of the lower Ngozumpa, Khumbu, Langtang and Lirung Glaciers, which highlights the relatively high local ablation rates associated with ice cliffs in these same areas (Figs S2, S4–S6). Relatively high ablation rates are also observed farther upglacier on these same four glaciers, with local rates exceeding 4 m a−1 over both clean and debris-covered ice. However, for Black Changri Nup Glacier, the ablation rates are consistently larger (1–2 m a−1) over the majority of the debris-covered surface near the terminus (Fig. S3). At Lirung Glacier, very high ablation rates (3 to >20 m a−1) are observed over the large ice cliff approximately 1 km from the terminus defined by the RGI v6.0 outline (Fig. S5).
The observed uncertainty for our surface velocity ($\sigma _{{\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}}$) and slope-corrected Lagrangian elevation change rate ($\sigma _{{{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t} - {\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}\cdot {\nabla h}}$) products ranges between 0.54–1.60 and 0.30–1.03 m a−1 respectively (Table S4, Fig. S7). In general, the Lagrangian SMB uncertainty ($\sigma _{{\dot {b}\over \rho }}$) estimates are relatively low (<1 m a−1) for stagnant, low elevation debris-covered ablation areas, with higher values (>1 to 2 m a−1) over actively flowing regions (Fig. 5). The higher $\sigma _{{\dot {b}\over \rho }}$ estimates are largely driven by larger $\sigma _{{\rm f}\nabla \cdot ( H{\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}) }$ estimates over fast-flowing areas with relatively thin ice (Fig. S7). The $\sigma _{{{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t} - {\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}\cdot {\nabla h}}$ estimates for Langtang Glacier are notably higher than the other study glaciers (Fig. S7). This increased error is likely caused by the shorter time interval and relatively large residual DEM errors, potentially due to co-registration issues for the snow-covered 22 February 2015 DEM.
5.3. Evaluation
Our adaptive smoothing approach performed well at all study glaciers, with negligible pre- and post-filter differences (computed over the same set of valid pixels) for both the average flux divergence and expected slope-parallel elevation change products (Table S2). Similarly, the observed differences between the glacier-wide average of Eulerian ${{\rm d}h\over {\rm d}t}$ and slope-corrected Lagrangian ${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}$ estimates were also negligible for our study glaciers (Table S3).
The Lagrangian SMB rate maps covered almost the entire Lirung and Black Changri Nup Glaciers due to their relatively small size and large debris-covered ablation areas. This enabled additional evaluation of the Eulerian ${{\rm d}h\over {\rm d}t}$ and final Lagrangian SMB rate products, with observed differences of 0.15 and 0.03 m a−1 for these two glaciers, respectively. The slightly larger difference over Lirung Glacier can be attributed to its unique state, where the current RGI polygon extent suggests that the active portion of the glacier is disconnected from its accumulation area. In this case, the observed difference represents the mean emergence velocity for Lirung Glacier, which is close to the value of 0.16 ± 0.1 m a−1 reported by Miles and others (Reference Miles2018a). Overall, these comparisons provide confidence that our Lagrangian framework properly conserves mass.
Figure 6 shows profiles for the full set of elevation change (${{\rm d}h\over {\rm d}t}$, ${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}$, ${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t} - {\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}\cdot {\nabla h}$) and SMB (${\dot {b}\over \rho }$) rate products for each of the study glaciers. As observed in the map products, the uncorrected Lagrangian ${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}$ measurements appear more negative than the corresponding Eulerian ${{\rm d}h\over {\rm d}t}$ measurements, underscoring the importance of the expected slope-parallel elevation change correction (Section 4.2). The resulting slope-corrected Lagrangian ${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}$ measurements show good agreement with corresponding Eulerian ${{\rm d}h\over {\rm d}t}$ measurements. We also observe a notable reduction in the spread of elevation change values within each bin in the slope-corrected Lagrangian ${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}$ products, especially for fast-flowing glaciers, due to the removal of artifacts related to advection of short-scale roughness. After correcting for estimated flux divergence, the final Lagrangian SMB rates generally appear more negative in the low to mid-elevation bins, and more positive in the high-elevation bins for glaciers with valid measurements in the accumulation area.
5.4. Surface mass-balance profiles
To investigate how debris thickness and elevation affect SMB, we compared profiles of the binned Lagrangian SMB rate, debris thickness and glacier hypsometry for each glacier (Fig. 7). Debris is generally thicker at lower elevations and thinner at higher elevations for all study glaciers, with some local variations (Fig. 8). We generally observe a pattern of more negative Lagrangian SMB rates at higher elevations for all six study glaciers (Fig. 8b), though there are some notable differences. For example, we observe an abrupt transition to more negative values in elevation bins ~ 200 and 400 m above the termini of the Langtang and Ngozumpa Glaciers, respectively. Lirung Glacier is entirely debris-covered with no tributaries (Figs S5, 7a), and the Lagrangian SMB rates become more negative at higher elevations, with the most negative values approximately 300 m above the terminus. There is also a decrease in median debris thickness across bins with the highest ablation rates.
5.5. Contribution of ablating ice cliffs to surface mass balance
The Lagrangian SMB rates are considerably more negative over ice cliffs compared to surrounding debris-covered ice for all study glaciers (Fig. 8c). The corresponding bin values for percent contribution of ablating ice cliffs to total ablation in debris-covered area ($\dot {b}_{\rm{icecliff}}$%) range from as low as $\leq 5\%$ to $\geq 50\%$ (Fig. 8e). Generally, the $\dot {b}_{\rm{icecliff}}$% values decrease with elevation, and covary with debris thickness and total debris-covered area affected by ablating ice cliffs (Fig. 8). For instance, at an elevation range between ~5000 and 5200 m over Ngozumpa, Imja Lhotse Shar and Khumbu Glaciers, debris thickness is similar, but the ($\dot {b}_{\rm{icecliff}}$%) for Khumbu and Imja Lhotse Shar Glacier is approximately twice that of Ngozumpa Glacier, as the debris-covered area affected by ablating ice cliffs is higher for these two glaciers.
When the binned values are aggregated over the entire debris-covered ablation area of each glacier, the ablating ice cliffs account for 9.8–37.9% of the total ablation, even though they only occupy 3.6–10.8% of the total debris-covered area (Table 3).
5.6. Seasonal surface mass balance
The seasonal Lagrangian SMB maps over Black Changri Nup Glacier document the spatial patterns of accumulation and ablation during both the summer and winter seasons (Fig. 9). During the winter period (November 2015 to April 2016), except for prominent negative signals over ice cliffs, we observe near-zero Lagrangian SMB over most of the debris-covered portions of the glacier (left panel of Fig. 9b). During the summer period (April 2016 to October 2016), most of the debris-covered surfaces have negative Lagrangian SMB, with greater ablation over ice cliffs (right panel of Fig. 9b). This summer ablation pattern is consistent with expectations for typical mountain glaciers. At elevations higher than 5600 m, however, we observe atypical patterns, with negative Lagrangian SMB during winter and positive Lagrangian SMB during summer (Figs 9b,c). This observation is corroborated by the end of winter orthoimage, which shows a reduction in snow cover from the preceding end of summer orthoimage (center panel of Fig. 9a). We also observe more snow cover at higher elevations in the subsequent end-of-summer orthoimage (right panel of Fig. 9a).
The high-resolution orthoimages and seasonal elevation change maps for Lirung Glacier (Fig. 10) capture deposition from avalanche event(s) triggered by the 25 April 2015 Gorkha Earthquake (Ragettli and others, Reference Ragettli, Immerzeel and Pellicciotti2016). We were unable to prepare contemporaneous velocities from the shaded relief maps for these periods, as the avalanche deposits obscured the surface features needed for coherent feature tracking. We therefore limited our analysis to the Eulerian elevation change products, without any additional corrections. We observe a large positive elevation change over the upper glacier during the winter period (22 January 2015 to 8 May 2015), with maximum local deposit thickness of ~30–55 m (left panel in Fig. 10b). We observe a large decrease in surface elevation over this same area during the following ~8 months (8 May 2015 to 29 December 2015), likely due to ablation and compaction of the avalanche deposits (right panel in Fig. 10b). The 29 December 2015 orthoimage from the end of this period shows that the entire glacier surface was covered in debris (right panel in Fig. 10a). However, the annual elevation change map for the full ~1-year period (22 January 2015 to 29 December 2015) shows a large area with residual positive elevation change of $\gtrsim \!10\!-\!30$ m, indicative of net accumulation (Fig. 10c). The maximum magnitude of expected elevation change due to flux divergence over these areas during the ~1-year period between 6 November 2016 and 22 December 2017 is only ~±1 m a−1 (Fig. S5d), an order of magnitude smaller than the observed seasonal elevation change.
6. Discussion
6.1. Lagrangian surface mass-balance products
Ablation rates over debris-covered glaciers are expected to be highly heterogeneous due to the spatial variation of debris thickness and distribution of relevant surface features (ice cliffs, supraglacial streams and melt ponds), though detailed observations of these surface features and their evolution are limited. Our results show that slope-corrected Lagrangian ${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}$ products derived from contemporaneous high-resolution elevation change and surface velocity products can measure local ablation rates over steep ice cliffs (e.g. Fig. 4). The Lagrangian specification is essential to remove anomalous elevation change signals due to advection of rough surface features (like ice cliffs) for actively flowing ice (>5 m a−1 surface velocity for our study glaciers). Isolated positive signals near some ice cliffs in the slope-corrected Lagrangian ${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}$ and Lagrangian SMB rate products (e.g. Fig. 4) are most likely due to infilling of adjacent supraglacial ponds and/or debris redistribution, as observed in recent studies of other debris-covered glaciers (e.g. Westoby and others, Reference Westoby2020; Mishra and others, Reference Mishra2022).
Our velocity products and associated flux divergence products offer comparable resolution to previous studies involving UAV datasets (e.g. Van Tricht and others, Reference Van Tricht2021b). The flux divergence maps prepared with our adaptive smoothing approach preserve important spatial variability that is removed by other approaches that average flux divergence over large bins or the entire ablation area (e.g. Brun and others, Reference Brun2018; Mishra and others, Reference Mishra2022). The spatial resolution of our smoothed flux divergence varies with local ice thickness, which approximates the physical controls on longitudinal driving stress and surface slopes. Some isolated areas with larger, potentially anomalous flux divergence values may be explained by some combination of real variations in the bed and observed surface topography (e.g. near icefalls, confluence of glacier tributaries), residual errors in ice thickness estimates and/or residual errors in surface velocity measurements.
6.2. Controls on ablation rates
The Lagrangian SMB rates observed near the terminus of all six studied glaciers were less negative than rates further upstream. This phenomenon can be explained by the thick debris cover in these areas that effectively offsets the higher ablation rates expected for the warmer air temperatures at lower elevations, as noted in previous studies (e.g. Östrem, Reference Östrem1959; Nicholson and Benn, Reference Nicholson and Benn2006; Rounce and McKinney, Reference Rounce and McKinney2014). With decreasing debris thickness upstream, the Lagrangian SMB rates become more negative despite cooler air temperatures, resulting in an inversion of the mass-balance gradient over low- to mid-elevation bins (Figs S5, 8).
Our results support the notion that debris thickness is a major control over ice ablation rates, in line with previous studies (e.g. Anderson and others, Reference Anderson, Armstrong, Anderson and Buri2021a; Zhao and others, Reference Zhao2023). We note that the debris thickness estimates and our Lagrangian SMB rate estimates are not entirely independent, as the debris thickness estimation method (Rounce and others, Reference Rounce2021) included a calibration step based on long-term elevation change measurements (Shean and others, Reference Shean2020) from the 2000 to 2018 period, which overlaps with the 2012–2017 period of this study. However, given the independence of the underlying DEM observations, this temporal overlap is not a concern.
Our analysis also demonstrates that while ablating ice cliffs affect a small percentage of the debris-covered area (4–11%), they account for a large percentage of total ablation (10–38%) for our study glaciers (Table 3). While this relationship has been observed in previous work for individual glaciers, to our knowledge, this is the first detailed observational analysis using consistent methodology for multiple glaciers. We did not observe a clear relationship between the observed Lagrangian SMB rate and elevation for areas affected by ablating ice cliffs (Fig. 8c), which is most likely due to the fact that the energy available for ice cliff ablation depends on local radiative forcing (Buri and others, Reference Buri, Miles, Steiner, Ragettli and Pellicciotti2021). However, the percent contribution of ablating ice cliffs to total ablation (Fig. 8e) does display some elevation dependence, which is most likely related to elevation-dependent differences in debris thickness and ice dynamics (i.e. surface velocity variations that influence ice cliff formation and evolution; e.g. Watson and others, Reference Watson, Quincey, Carrivick and Smith2017a).
For relatively slow, stagnant ice with thick debris cover, we expect to see fewer but more persistent ice cliffs, sustained mainly by surrounding supraglacial ponds (e.g. Buri and Pellicciotti, Reference Buri and Pellicciotti2018; Kneib and others, Reference Kneib2022). Sub-debris ablation rates over these stagnant regions will be low, which increases the relative contribution of ice cliffs to total ablation. This phenomenon is clearly demonstrated at Lirung Glacier, where the large terminal ice cliff can account for ~60% of the total ablation in its elevation bin (Figs S5, 8).
For actively flowing (>5 m a−1) ice, multiple transitions between compressional and extensional flow are expected to produce more dynamic ice cliffs which grow and disappear relatively quickly (e.g. Benn and others, Reference Benn2012; Kraaijenbrink and others, Reference Kraaijenbrink, Shea, Pellicciotti, Jong and Immerzeel2016b; Anderson and others, Reference Anderson, Armstrong, Anderson, Scherler and Petersen2021b). This phenomenon can be attributed to higher crevasse density (Reid and Brock, Reference Reid and Brock2014), more rugged surface topography that exposes steep ice faces due to thinner debris cover, and higher rates of debris redistribution (Anderson and others, Reference Anderson, Armstrong, Anderson, Scherler and Petersen2021b). In these areas, even though the size and location of the ice cliffs will evolve with time, the number of ice cliffs is expected to be relatively high (e.g. Kneib and others, Reference Kneib2022), again resulting in a considerable contribution of ice cliffs to total ablation, especially at high elevations where sub-debris ablation rates are low (Fig. 8) due to cooler air temperatures (Buri and others, Reference Buri, Miles, Steiner, Ragettli and Pellicciotti2021).
6.3. Comparison with previously published results
Our estimates for Lagrangian SMB rate and the percent contribution of ablating ice cliffs to total ablation in debris-covered areas ($\dot {b}_{\rm{icecliff}}$%) are consistent with existing estimates for the same glaciers prepared using independent methods and/or data sources. While these comparisons are limited to select glaciers and time periods, they offer additional validation for our methodology, and greater confidence when applying our approach to study other glaciers in the region.
Buri and others (Reference Buri, Miles, Steiner, Ragettli and Pellicciotti2021) estimated the contribution of ice cliffs to total ablation in debris-covered areas using energy balance models for four glaciers in Langtang National park. Their estimates for Lirung and Langtang Glacier, 11 ± 5 and $21\pm 4\%$, respectively, are similar to our estimates of 10 and 24% for the same glaciers. They manually identified ice cliffs, and their reported ice cliff area (A icecliff) was 0.018 ± 0.0047 km2 for Lirung Glacier and 0.31 ± 0.081 km2 for Langtang Glacier (Table 1 in Buri and others, Reference Buri, Miles, Steiner, Ragettli and Pellicciotti2021) – considerably lower than our estimates for area affected by ablating ice cliffs of 0.05 and 0.98 km2, respectively (Table 3). This discrepancy in ice cliff area is likely due to the methodological differences and real temporal changes in ice cliff distribution. For instance, Steiner and others (Reference Steiner, Buri, Miles, Ragettli and Pellicciotti2019) and Buri and others (Reference Buri, Miles, Steiner, Ragettli and Pellicciotti2021) used a conservative approach for ice cliff mapping, favoring large cliffs that could be delineated in high-resolution (~1.5 m GSD) SPOT-6 satellite images with high confidence. Additionally, ice cliff area evolves on seasonal (Steiner and others, Reference Steiner, Buri, Miles, Ragettli and Pellicciotti2019) to annual timescales (Kneib and others, Reference Kneib2021b), especially for smaller ice cliffs. Despite these differences, the fact that our estimates for percent contribution are similar to those of Buri and others (Reference Buri, Miles, Steiner, Ragettli and Pellicciotti2021) suggests that larger ice cliffs dominate the total ice cliff contribution to ablation for these glaciers.
Thompson and others (Reference Thompson, Benn, Mertes and Luckman2016) prepared DEMs for Ngozumpa Glacier using the same very-high-resolution stereo image pairs from December 2012 and January 2015 (Table S1). They estimated an ice cliff contribution to total ablation in debris-covered areas of $39\%$, though they did not correct for flux divergence and their analysis was limited to slow-flowing (<5 m a−1) regions. Our Lagrangian framework allowed us to extend this analysis to the entire debris-covered surface of Ngozumpa Glacier, where we estimate a smaller contribution of ablating ice cliffs to total ablation in debris-covered areas of $31\%$.
Brun and others (Reference Brun2018) estimated a mean SMB rate of −1.10 ± 0.27 m a−1 over the entire debris-covered portion of the Black Changri Nup Glacier for the period spanning 23 November 2015 to 16 November 2016, and −1.20 ± 0.36 m a−1 for the period spanning 22 November 2015 to 13 November 2016, using DEMs derived from UAV and Pleiades-HR images, respectively. These values agree very well with our mean Lagrangian SMB rate estimate of −1.18 m a−1 over the debris-covered portion of the Black Changri Nup Glacier from the same period (15 November 2015 to 25 October 2016). Over the same area, Brun and others (Reference Brun2018) estimated an emergence velocity of 0.33 ± 0.11 m a−1 using IPR-derived ice thickness transects, agreeing closely with the mean flux divergence of −0.31 m a−1 derived in this study. Additionally, Brun and others (Reference Brun2018) estimated that ice cliffs contributed up to $24\pm 5\%$ of the total ablation in debris-covered areas, which is similar to our estimate of 22%, even though the two studies used different methods for ice-cliff delineation.
6.4. Seasonal surface mass balance
Our seasonal case studies for Black Changri Nup (median elevation of 5468 m, Table 2) and Lirung Glacier (4255 m) document the distinctive accumulation and ablation patterns of debris-covered glaciers at different elevations in the Central Himalayas.
We observed significant accumulation and increased snow cover during the summer period for the high-elevation Black Changri Nup Glacier (right panel in Fig. 9b). Wagnon and others (Reference Wagnon2013) reported mean monthly temperatures of ~3−4°C during summer (June–August) at the Pyramid Base station (~5035 m) between 2003 and 2012. This suggests that summer temperatures should be at or below freezing at elevations higher than ~5650 m for a standard adiabatic lapse rate of 6.5°C km−1. The Black Changri Nup accumulation area is located above ~5600 m, which should allow for sustained snow accumulation during the summer monsoon season.
In contrast, we observe ablation and decreased snow cover during the winter period for the Black Changri Nup Glacier (left panel in Fig. 9b), which is consistent with traditional glaciological measurements for the nearby debris-free Mera Glacier (Wagnon and others, Reference Wagnon2013). The large negative Lagrangian SMB observed at higher elevations during winter can potentially be explained by some combination of snow sublimation (e.g. Litt and others, Reference Litt2019; Mandal and others, Reference Mandal2022), snow redistribution due to stronger winds at higher altitudes (e.g. Wagnon and others, Reference Wagnon2013; Huintjes and others, Reference Huintjes, Neckel, Hochschild and Schneider2015) and/or snow and firn compaction. We are confident that these are real signals, but some component may also be related to the underestimation of submergence velocities due to local errors in the ice thickness and surface velocity estimates.
While these results for a summer-accumulation type glacier are intriguing, our preliminary seasonal observations only span 1 year, and 2015 may not be representative of typical seasonal SMB. Notably, our methods can be applied to other glaciers where multiple very-high-resolution stereo images have been acquired in a single year, which can improve our understanding of seasonal accumulation and ablation patterns for glaciers in the region. Future comparisons with available weather station and climate reanalysis data during our observation period could potentially offer additional insights to guide further interpretation.
Snow avalanches also represent an important seasonal accumulation source for many debris-covered glaciers, especially those with accumulation areas at lower elevations. We documented a large late winter accumulation signal at Lirung Glacier due to snow avalanche(s) triggered by the Gorkha Earthquake. The large volume of these snow avalanche deposits can be explained by the anomalously high snow accumulation on surrounding peaks during the preceding 2014–15 winter (Fujita and others, Reference Fujita2017). Future systematic very-high-resolution stereo image tasking campaigns can potentially document the timing, magnitude and evolution (potentially isolating compaction vs ablation) of large avalanche deposits on Lirung Glacier or others in the region to better understand their contribution to glacier SMB in the Central Himalayas and other regions of High-Mountain Asia.
6.5. Limitations and considerations for future work
The primary focus of our study was to develop a processing workflow and analysis framework, knowing that future improvements in ice thickness, surface velocity and density products will improve the accuracy of our results. Our methodology involves several advancements including high-resolution DEM processing, contemporaneous surface velocity and elevation difference calculation, and a thickness-dependent smoothing approach for flow correction. However, we also identified several limitations of our approach and areas for future improvement, including the need for more in situ reference measurements (e.g. ice thickness, flux divergence, SMB, firn thickness and density) which we discuss in the following sections.
6.5.1. Surface velocity measurements
The contemporaneous velocity and DEM products are essential to maintain feature correspondence and track individual ice cliffs over debris-covered ablation areas. Our approach involving shaded relief maps to compute horizontal surface displacements can fail in fast-flowing areas (e.g. icefalls) due to feature decorrelation over longer timescales and a lack of surface texture (e.g. snow-covered accumulation areas; Section 3.1.2, 5.1). One potential solution is to create composite ice velocity products, using short baseline pairs of complementary optical (e.g. Chapter 4 in Altena and Kääb, Reference Altena and Kääb2020; Bhushan, Reference Bhushan2023) or Synthetic Aperture Radar images (e.g. Lei and others, Reference Lei, Gardner and Agram2022) from the same time period to fill these data gaps.
6.5.2. Flux divergence, ice thickness and basal sliding
We derived flux divergence using modeled estimates of ice thickness and some simplifying assumptions (Section 4.1). The ice thickness estimates could be calibrated and/or validated using in situ ice thickness measurements (e.g. Pritchard and others, Reference Pritchard2020), which would reduce the flux divergence uncertainty.
We made common assumptions about the relative contributions of deformation and basal sliding to observed surface velocity. It is possible that basal sliding is non-negligible for some areas of our study glaciers (e.g. Kraaijenbrink and others, Reference Kraaijenbrink2016a), which could warrant a spatially and temporally variable f scaling parameter to estimate column-averaged velocity. However, we expect the magnitude of elevation change uncertainty to exceed any uncertainty introduced by f variation, as demonstrated in Van Tricht and others (Reference Van Tricht2021b) and Armstrong and others (Reference Armstrong2022). Future studies exploring seasonal glacier velocity variability (e.g. Chapter 4 in Armstrong and others, Reference Armstrong, Anderson and Fahnestock2017; Bhushan, Reference Bhushan2023) and connections between glacier surface hydrology and basal conditions (e.g. Benn and others, Reference Benn2017; Miles and others, Reference Miles2018b) should improve our understanding of the relative contribution of basal sliding to glacier flow for these debris-covered glaciers.
6.5.3. Uncertainty propagation
While our uncertainty estimation approach for the elevation change and surface velocity products follows standard geodetic glacier mass-balance community practices, we now discuss potential limitations and challenges. For one, the same set of non-glacierized, static control surfaces were used for calibration (co-registration) and uncertainty estimation. Also, while global statistics (e.g. median, NMAD) computed over static surfaces are robust to outliers, they may not be directly representative of the true errors in the same products over glacier surfaces, which can have characteristically different surface slope and roughness distributions (e.g. Hugonnet and others, Reference Hugonnet2022; Zheng and others, Reference Zheng2023; Guillet and Bolch, Reference Guillet and Bolch2023). To examine the assumption of uniform uncertainty across static and glacier surfaces, we assessed observed residuals over static areas as a function of terrain predictors (e.g. surface slope and elevation). We did not observe any distinct relationship between observed residual error magnitude and the range of surface elevation and slope values for our study glaciers. Finally, there are coherent patterns of $\sigma _{{{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t} - {\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}\cdot {\nabla h}}$ residuals (Fig. S7) that appear to be real elevation change signals over moraines, hillslopes, lakes and seasonal snow, suggesting that some of these surfaces should not be considered ‘static’. Their inclusion likely resulted in a small overestimate of errors for glacier surfaces.
Our adaptive smoothing approach reduces the random errors in the flux divergence products inherited from the velocity and ice thickness products. However, residual systematic bias could introduce errors when averaging over large areas (e.g. SMB for the entire ablation area, as in Van Tricht and others, Reference Van Tricht2021b). Quantifying the accuracy improvement offered by our adaptive smoothing approach and isolating the relative contribution of ice thickness bias to flux divergence uncertainty is difficult without spatially distributed reference flux divergence and SMB measurements.
Finally, our forward uncertainty propagation approach likely overestimates uncertainty, especially over slow-flowing areas where the ${\sigma _{{\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}}\over {\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}}$ term is large. Future work involving probabilistic uncertainty estimation approaches such as bootstrapping or Monte Carlo methods (e.g. Miles and others, Reference Miles2021) may provide more representative estimates and better understanding of sensitivity to errors in each component.
6.5.4. Ice cliff delineation and ablation rates
We identified areas affected by retreat and ablation of ice cliffs using empirically derived thresholds for surface slope and observed ablation rates (Section 4.4). While our ice cliff ablation metrics are consistent with published results (Section 6.3), we acknowledge that our approach preferentially identifies areas with steeper ice cliffs experiencing high ablation rates, while potentially excluding ice cliffs with lower ablation rates. The percent contribution of ablating ice cliffs to total ablation metric (Eqn (10)) is less sensitive to this delineation approach, as it captures the total volume of ablation associated with ice cliffs, which is dominated by losses from large ice cliffs (e.g. Brun and others, Reference Brun2018).
We evaluated the accuracy of our approach to identify areas affected by ablating and retreating ice cliffs, and the associated sensitivity to our maximum ${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}- {\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}\nabla {h}$ threshold, for Black Changri Nup Glacier. To accomplish this, we prepared a control inventory by manually mapping ice cliffs using very-high-resolution orthoimages, shaded relief maps and surface slope maps. We then compared the control inventory with inventories derived using a maximum ${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t}- {\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}\nabla {h}$ threshold of between −3.5 and −1.6 m a−1, with 0.1 m a−1 interval. We defined true positives as pixels that were classified as ice cliffs by both approaches, false positives as pixels that were classified as ice cliffs by the threshold approach but not the manual approach, false negatives as pixels that were classified as ice cliffs by the manual approach but not the threshold approach, and true negatives as pixels that were correctly classified as non-ice cliffs by both approaches. We computed the Sørensen–Dice coefficient and other accuracy metrics from the confusion matrix for the range of ${{\rm D}h\over {\rm D}t} - {\boldsymbol u_{\rm s}}\nabla {h}$ thresholds. We found that higher threshold values (closer to −1.6 m a−1) resulted in more false positives, and lower threshold values (closer to −3.5 m a−1) resulted in more false negatives. The maximum Sørensen–Dice coefficient of 0.57 occurred for thresholds between −2.1 and −2.6 m a−1, which supports our decision to use a conservative −2.5 m a−1 threshold to identify areas affected by ablating ice cliffs for all of our study glaciers.
As noted previously, all approaches to delineate ice cliffs have limitations (Section 4.4), but future studies could employ a combination of approaches using additional datasets (orthoimages, DEMs, elevation change products) and temporal consistency checks to increase confidence. Approaches involving convolutional neural networks for segmentation are also promising, assuming adequate manually prepared training datasets are available. Future work could also explore the M3C2 approach (Lague and others, Reference Lague, Brodu and Leroux2013) to compute surface-normal elevation change for ice cliffs, rather than vertical elevation change, to produce more robust ablation estimates over steeper ice cliffs (e.g. Mishra and others, Reference Mishra2022; Kneib and others, Reference Kneib2023).
6.5.5. Density considerations
In principle, we could have made common assumptions about the density and spatial distribution of ice, firn and snow to estimate mass change and SMB with units of m w.e. a−1 for our study glaciers. However, as discussed in Section 4.1 and many previous studies (e.g. Sold and others, Reference Sold2013; Huss, Reference Huss2013; Belart and others, Reference Belart2017; Florentine and others, Reference Florentine, O'Neel, Sass, McNeil and Baker2019; Pelto and others, Reference Pelto, Menounos and Marshall2019; Berthier and others, Reference Berthier2023), these values are poorly constrained for mountain glaciers, especially those in High-Mountain Asia, and they display considerable spatial and temporal variability.
With this in mind, we chose to report Lagrangian SMB rate in m a−1, and offer guidance for interpretation and conversion to m w.e. a−1. In practice, a constant ice density of ~900 kg m−3 is appropriate for most of the observed change over ablation areas, and multiplying the Lagrangian SMB rate values by 900 kg m−3 will provide ablation rates in ${{\rm kg}\over {\rm m}^{2}.{\rm yr}}$. The mass-balance estimates in ${\rm{kg\over m^{2}.yr}}$ can be divided by density of water (assumed to be 1000 kg m−3) to obtain measurements in units of m w.e. a−1. While our product coverage is relatively limited over the accumulation areas of our study glaciers, following Zeller and others (Reference Zeller2022), we recommend that a constant bulk density of between 400 and 750 kg m−3 could be used to convert our Lagrangian SMB rate products to m w.e. a−1 depending on material type (e.g. snow vs firn) and observation period (seasonal vs annual). Future site-specific in situ observations of seasonal snow density could provide improved bulk density constraints for SMB conversion over accumulation areas.
Our approach assumes a constant density of ice when computing the flux divergence for a column with thickness H (e.g. Miles and others, Reference Miles2021). We expect a slightly lower column-averaged density (i.e. ~850 to <900 vs 900 to 917 kg m−3) in accumulation areas due to firn (e.g. Pelto and Menounos, Reference Pelto and Menounos2021), which would reduce the effective ice thickness and likely the magnitude of the flux divergence component in Eqn (5). As a result, our final Lagrangian SMB rate estimates may have a small positive bias in accumulation areas, though this bias should be well within our estimated uncertainty (Fig. 5).
Our theoretical framework assumes a constant column-averaged density over time (Eqn (5)), thereby neglecting the effects of firn densification. Firn compaction should introduce a small negative bias in our final Lagrangian SMB rate estimates over accumulation areas. However, we expect lower accumulation areas (i.e. closer to the equilibrium line, where we typically have valid product coverage) to have thin firn and low densification rates, such that any bias would be within the range of our estimated uncertainty (Figs 5, S7). Finally, changes in firn densification rates over seasonal time intervals could also introduce bias (Huss, Reference Huss2013), but this effect is not directly quantifiable without a well-calibrated firn model.
In general, calibration and validation of firn models for mountain glaciers remains a major challenge, and there are few in situ measurements available for these remote debris-covered glaciers (e.g. Stumm and others, Reference Stumm, Joshi, Gurung and Silwal2021). As firn models for glaciers in High-Mountain Asia continue to improve (e.g. Kronenberg and others, Reference Kronenberg2022, Reference Kronenberg, Machguth, Eichler, Schwikowski and Hoelzle2021), our open-source code can be adapted to incorporate spatially and temporally variable snow and firn density, ultimately improving estimates of Lagrangian SMB rates in upper accumulation areas.
6.5.6. Implications for glacier model calibration
Many glacier mass-balance models rely on specific SMB rates in m w.e. a−1 over the full glacier for calibration. At present, we do not provide these estimates for accumulation areas due to issues around missing data and not as well constrained surface material density, as discussed in the previous section. However, our high-resolution SMB estimates over ablation areas can be directly used for model calibration on seasonal to annual timescales. Our annual observations capture the spatially varying effects of debris thickness and ice cliffs on ablation rates with unprecedented detail for six debris-covered glaciers in Nepal. These results and associated data products can improve calibration of glacier mass-balance models for the region, and in turn, coupled glacio-hydrologic models (e.g. Khadka and others, Reference Khadka, Kayastha and Kayastha2020; Srivastava and Azam, Reference Srivastava and Azam2022), and land surface models (e.g. Buri and others, Reference Buri2023). With further improvements in density handling over accumulation areas, our distributed seasonal SMB estimates will improve the calibration of temperature and precipitation correction factors in glacier mass-balance models (e.g. Rounce and others, Reference Rounce, Hock and Shean2020a; Schuster and others, Reference Schuster, Rounce and Maussion2023). Our methods can be extended to include a larger sample of representative glaciers in High-Mountain Asia and other regions of the world, which would improve global glacier modeling efforts, including prognostic models for debris-covered glacier evolution in the coming century.
7. Conclusions
We developed a workflow to generate flow-corrected Lagrangian SMB measurements using contemporaneous glacier surface elevation and surface velocity observations derived from very-high-resolution commercial satellite stereo images. The resulting high-resolution Lagrangian SMB rate products capture the detailed spatial patterns of surface ablation for six debris-covered glaciers in the Central Himalayas.
Our processing workflow includes a slope-parallel flow correction using contemporaneous DEM and velocity products, and a novel ice-thickness-dependent smoothing filter that removes artifacts while preserving signals with physically meaningful length scales. We evaluated our approach using mass conservation checks between the Eulerian and Lagrangian products and independent published SMB estimates for the same glaciers and time periods. Our conservative forward uncertainty calculation framework allowed us to evaluate the relative contribution of different input products to the final Lagrangian SMB rate uncertainty estimates. We found that flux divergence uncertainty dominated total uncertainty over most of the glacier surface, especially for relatively fast-flowing, thin ice.
Our Lagrangian SMB rate products document local ablation rates for debris-covered areas and surface features such as ice cliffs. We analyzed the elevation-dependent relationship between debris thickness and observed ablation rates for our study glaciers, reaffirming that local debris thickness exerts important control on ice ablation rates. Ice cliffs also increase ablation rates over both stagnant and actively flowing debris-covered ice. Our results showed that ice cliffs are responsible for 10–38% of the total ablation in debris-covered areas for these glaciers, even though they occupy $< \!11\%$ by area.
We documented the atypical timing and patterns of seasonal accumulation and ablation for two of our study glaciers. The high-elevation Black Changri Nup Glacier had limited winter accumulation rates and relatively high summer accumulation rates, which highlights the importance of summer snow accumulation for glaciers in the high-elevation Sagarmatha (Everest) region. We also documented the emplacement and evolution of ~30−55 m thick winter snow avalanche deposits over the low-elevation, completely debris-covered Lirung Glacier. These results suggest that avalanche runout represents an important accumulation mechanism for lower elevation glaciers in monsoon-dominated regions of High-Mountain Asia.
Our methodology can be applied to large archives of very-high-resolution stereo images (e.g. Maxar WorldView-01/02/03, Shean and others (Reference Shean2020), Pléiades-HR/NEO, Berthier and others (Reference Berthier2014), Planet SkySat, Bhushan and others (Reference Bhushan, Shean, Alexandrov and Henderson2021)) and derived high-resolution DEM products (e.g. ArcticDEM, REMA, EarthDEM), providing new opportunities to study glacier SMB processes on a regional scale. Future work can potentially offer solutions to current limitations related to data gaps over accumulation areas, ice thickness uncertainty, poorly constrained density estimates and residual elevation change uncertainty related to systematic DEM artifacts and co-registration errors. Ultimately, high-resolution SMB observations like those presented here will improve our understanding of debris-covered glacier surface processes, offer improved calibration data for glacier mass-balance models, and enhance our overall understanding of the past and future behavior of High-Mountain Asia glaciers in a changing climate.
Supplementary material
The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/jog.2024.57.
Data
Data products prepared and analyzed for this study are available from the National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) High Mountain Asia data archive (Bhushan and others, Reference Bhushan, Shean, Hu, Guillet and Rounce2024). The original Level-1B images used in the study cannot be redistributed due to licensing restrictions. Federally funded researchers can request access via the NASA Commercial Smallsat Data Acquisition (CSDA) program under the NRO Electro-Optical Commercial Layer (EOCL) license.
A repository containing the open-source Python libraries, scripts and Jupyter Notebooks used for all data processing, analysis and figure preparation is available on Github under the MIT license (https://github.com/uw-cryo/debris_cover_smb). The version of the code used to prepare materials for the published manuscript is archived on Zenodo (Bhushan, Reference Bhushan2024).
Acknowledgements
Shashank Bhushan was supported by a NASA FINESST fellowship (80NSSC19K1338) and NASA HiMAT-2 grant 80NSSC20K1595. David Shean, David Robert Rounce and Grégoire Guillet were supported by NASA HiMAT-2 grant 80NSSC20K1595. Jyun-Yi Michelle Hu was supported by NASA THP grant 80NSSC18K1405. Resources supporting this work were provided by the NASA High-End Computing (HEC) Program through the NASA Advanced Supercomputing (NAS) Division at Ames Research Center. We thank Scott Henderson for providing feedback on an earlier draft. Discussions with Lucas Zeller, Albin Wells, Ben Pelto and Romain Hugonnet were helpful in method development and interpretation of results. We are thankful to Eric Gagliano for assistance in developing ice cliff area sensitivity analysis framework. We are thankful to Oleg Alexandrov and Scott McMichael for providing ASP support. We thank all research teams who have released datasets from field research in High-Mountain Asia, which provides a foundation and important validation for the remote-sensing research. We are grateful to scientific editor Fanny Brun, William Armstrong, Lizz Ultee, Evan Miles and an anonymous reviewer for their constructive and detailed feedback during the peer review process, which greatly improved the quality of the manuscript.
Author contributions
S. B. and D. S. conceived the project. S. B., D. S. and D. R. R. participated in funding acquisition. S. B. performed literature survey, led method and code development, produced and analyzed results, produced the figures and wrote the first draft of the manuscript. D. S. supervised the entire research and provided essential feedback during method development, analysis, manuscript writing and manuscript editing. J.-Y. M. H. provided assistance during method development, contributed to DEM production pipeline development, provided feedback on figures and writing structure. G. G. provided feedback on writing of the introduction and theory section, and provided assistance with interpretation. D. R. R. provided feedback on theory, methods, interpretation and analysis. All authors contributed to review and editing of the manuscript, especially D. S.