Observations in Alaska
Since they were first seen, some Alaskan tidewater glaciers have suffered catastrophic recession, some have oscillated, and others have continued a slow advance: all three kinds of behaviour may occur within a comparatively small area. In some cases what appear to be the maximum post-Thermal Maximum positions have been reached during the last two centuries, but often there are massive terminal moraines of an earlier, much greater advance. Most of these are of unknown age and may thus be pre-Thermal Maximum, but in Yakutat and Icy Bays the outer moraines have been dated by 14C to a.d. 970–1290 and 600–920 respectively.Reference Plafker and Miller 1
End moraines are almost always found at the mouths of the fjords, or of branches of the fjords, or in places where these widen or are bordered by low ground; in other words, where the glacier termini could expand. After examining the characteristics and recent behaviour of some tidewater glaciers, an attempt will be made to explain this by showing theoretically that a glacier in an ideal fjord of constant width, when responding to a change in the firn limit, can only reach standstill in such a position, and will continue to advance or retreat between breaks in the width with no further change in the firn limit. Such a glacier may therefore be anomalous in its behaviour compared to glaciers on dry land in the vicinity. Most tidewater glaciers are in inlets that bear enough resemblance to this ideal example for the theory to have practical applications.
Tidewater glaciers are found from the Kenai Peninsula to the neighbourhood of Petersburg. With the exception of La Perouse Glacier which enters the open sea, all are in fjords or bays. The present state and past movements of those for which there are good maps, air photographs, and some ground observations, are described from north-west to south-east.
Glaciers of the Harding Icefield (Fig. 1)
The M’Carty Glacier is in a long, straight fjord of almost constant width, and at its maximum about 1860,Reference Grant and Higgins 2 ended where the fjord widened. Retreat was very slow at first but has tended to accelerate since.
In the 25 years from 1925 to 1950 the total length decreased from 35 to
km.Reference Field 3The Northwestern Glacier at the beginning of the century extended to a maximum position at a widening of the inlet, but by 1909 had withdrawn about 400 m.Reference Grant and Higgins 4 From 1909 to 1942 it retreated 6 km. and from 1942 to 1950 another 4 km.Reference Field 5
The Aialik Glacier when first seen in 1909 had almost withdrawn from the water, and has changed little since, but across the fjord at the first break in width there is an ancient terminal moraine.Reference Grant and Higgins 6, Reference Field 7
Glaciers of Port Wells (Fig. 2)
During the nineteenth century, some of the glaciers of Port Wells such as the Yale, Barry, Serpentine and Surprise Glaciers, reached a maximum position at the mouths of smaller inlets; others, such as the Harvard and Harriman, are still advancing into mature forest.Reference Field 8 Several kilometres beyond, there is a set of ancient moraines of unknown age at the mouths of College Fjord and Barry Arm.Reference Tarr and Martin 9
Meares Glacier, Unakwik Inlet (Fig. 2)
Since it was first seen in 1905 the Meares Glacier at the head of Unakwik Inlet has been advancing slowly into mature forest, while the small glaciers round the fjord have all been receding.Reference Field 10 There is a much older terminal moraine half-way down the fjord at a place where expansion of the terminus onto low ground was possible.Reference Tarr and Martin 11 The front is at present narrowing slightly as it advances.
Columbia Glacier, Prince William Sound
The Columbia Glacier invaded mature forest in 1892 and again between 1917 and 1922, since when the terminus has oscillated.Reference Field 12 This maximum has occurred at a small but definite widening of the valley and at its present position the front is about one-third wider than it was 5 km. back.
Shoup Glacier, Port Valdez
There has been little change in the position of the terminus of the Shoup Glacier since the end of the nineteenth century, when it had withdrawn to the head of its fjord and was no longer afloat.Reference Field 13 Outside the entrance to the fjord there is a crescentic terminal moraine, mostly submerged.
Glaciers of Yakutat and Icy Bays
The Hubbard Glacier at the head of Disenchantment Bay, which opens into Yakutat Bay, is advancing, and is now further forward than in 1891.Reference Field 14 A terminal moraine at the mouth of the fjord marks the maximum position in the eighteenth century, and another much longer moraine at the entrance to Yakutat Bay itself marks the maximum of a.d. 970–1290. Icy Bay also has two terminal moraines, the older formed between a.d. 600 and 920. Recession from the younger began about 1904;Reference Plafker and Miller 15 between then and 1941 the ice retreated 25 km. but has remained fairly stable since.Reference Field 16
Glaciers of Glacier Bay (Fig. 3)
About a.d. 1750 ice completely filled Glacier Bay to its mouth. By Vancouver’s visit in 1794 recession had already begun and when next seen in 1879 the ice had retreated past Thlinkit Point and split into two streams. Recession continued up Reid Arm to a maximum of 100 km. from Icy Strait, this being the greatest recession observed anywhere in the world. Grand Pacific and Johns Hopkins Glaciers have readvanced about
km. since the 1920’s, and Muir Glacier has continued its retreat, broken by short periods of stability.Reference Field 17, Reference Cooper 18, Reference Field 19Glaciers in the Holkham Bay area (Fig. 4)
Tracy and Endicott Arms, fjords opening off Holkham Bay, have massive, partly submerged terminal moraines at their mouths, about 40 km. from the present ice fronts, and other much smaller moraines are found inside Endicott Arm at breaks in the width. Since 1889 in Tracy Arm the South Sawyer has retreated about
km. while the Sawyer has oscillated.Reference Field 20 In Endicott Arm the Dawes Glacier has retreated spasmodically a total of about 5 km. and the North Dawes about km.Reference Field 21Baird Glacier, Thomas Bay
The Baird Glacier at the head of Thomas Bay advanced from its first survey in 1887 till 1935 when it was invading mature forest. Since then the position of the terminus has changed little.Reference Field 22 At the entrance to the Bay, a large crescentic spit and reef appear to be a partly submerged terminal moraine.
The Le Conte Glacier, Frederick Sound
The Le Conte is the southernmost tidewater glacier in North America (lat. 56° 50′ N.). It retreated about 3 km. between 1893 and 1942; as a result, the lower part of the glacier has steepened and the active front narrowed, and from 1942 to 1948 there was no appreciable change.Reference Field 23 Shoals and islets outside the entrance to the bay probably mark an ancient end moraine.
The Theoretical Responses of Fjord Glaciers to Changes in the Firn Limit
(1) The response to a fall in the firn limit
A glacier in equilibrium, with its terminus near the head of a fjord of constant width (a, Fig. 5), will have its accumulation balanced by surface melting, and by calving and melting along the terminus. If the glacier is afloat, there will also be losses from under-melting, but it is unlikely that any fjord glacier in Alaska is afloat today. If the firn limit falls and the terminus advances, calving and melting along the terminus will remain constant since the fjord is of constant width, so that the glacier can reach equilibrium only by increasing the length of its ablation area, since it cannot widen. If the glacier is afloat, the area subject to undermelting will increase to a maximum and then remain more or less constant since the under-surface slopes down towards, and eventually reaches, the fjord bottom.
As the terminus advances, however, the ice at any given point behind it will thicken and eventually the ice above what was the head of the fjord may reach the firn limit (b, Fig. 5). This is a critical point because thereafter as the terminus advances the firn limit will advance an equal distance behind it as the surface slope will tend to remain the same (c, Fig. 5). In other words, if the terminus advances past this point the ablation area remains constant while the accumulation area increases with no further fall in the firn limit. The terminus will therefore continue to advance down the fjord until this widens and wastage can increase: a fjord glacier may therefore still be advancing long after others in the neighbourhood have reached equilibrium.
This effect will be enhanced by another factor. The increase of net ablation below the firn limit is almost linear; that is, a halving of the vertical distance below the firn limit will also halve the net ablation.Reference Renaud 24, Reference Nielsen 25 A glacier on a hillside can respond to a fall in firn limit by advancing its terminus to a lower elevation but the terminus of a fjord glacier is always at sea level, and therefore if the firn limit falls, the vertical distance between it and the terminus will decrease. After a fall in the firn limit, the ablation area of a fjord glacier will therefore be less effective per unit area than before, and will have to be larger to suffer the same wastage. The greater the proportional fall in firn limit the greater will this effect be; in other words, for any given fall in firn limit, the effect will be greater the closer the original firn limit was to sea-level.
In a Y-shaped fjord system after a fall in the firn limit, glaciers may advance along the arms of the Y (a, Fig. 6) and reach equilibrium as their termini expand into the main fjord (b, Fig. 6). They may remain in this position indefinitely if the termini do not come into contact with each other; this is apparently what happened in Port Wells and Holkham Bay (Figs. 2 and 4). If the termini start to coalesce, however, the total calving losses will decrease and the combined glacier will advance down the main fjord (c, Fig. 6) to its mouth, where equilibrium is restored (d, Fig. 6).
This must have happened in Glacier Bay where, however, another factor was also operating. All fjords differ more or less from the ideal example of constant width, and the glaciers in them will be more stable if they narrow towards their heads, when the wastage will increase as the glacier advances (Fig. 7A), less stable if they widen, for then the wastage will decrease (Fig. 7B). Glacier Bay widens and in such a bay since any advance will decrease and any retreat increase the wastage, once a terminus is moving forward or backward it will tend to continue in that direction even against contrary changes in the firn limit. It is probable that the firn limit in Glacier Bay had already started to rise before the glacier had reached its maximum otherwise equilibrium would not have been reached when the terminus was at the very narrowest part of the bay, but the advance was able to continue to this point as the calving front became progressively narrower.
(2) The response to a rise in the firn limit
A glacier may be advancing down a fjord when the firn limit starts to rise; if it is fairly near the head of the fjord and has a moderately steep surface slope, a small rise in the firn limit may still leave it with a positive regimen, and it will continue to advance though more slowly than before. This may account for the continued advance of the Harvard and Meares Glaciers. A glacier with its terminus further from the head of the fjord, however, is more vulnerable to a rise in the firn limit because of its lower surface gradient. In the same area, therefore, slight differences in surface profile may result in very different responses to the same rise in firn limit.
Unlike a glacier on land, particularly one well protected with surface moraine, a glacier afloat cannot stagnate in situ as it has a calving front: the terminus must respond at once to any decrease in the supply of ice. This is well illustrated by the great retreats of the ice fronts in Icy and Yakutat Bays while the Malaspina Glacier in between has changed very little in extent.
If a fjord glacier has reached a position of equilibrium before the rise in firn limit, with its terminus expanded outside the mouth of a fjord, it will retreat slowly into the fjord, thus reducing the wastage from calving. After it has withdrawn into the fjord, however, its behaviour will depend on the configuration of the fjord as it did when it was advancing. In an ideal fjord of constant width the calving losses, and undermelting losses if any, remain constant, and the ablation area will grow in both size and effectiveness per unit area as the gap between firn limit and terminus widens and the glacier surface is lowered. The retreat will therefore accelerate until, as the terminus withdraws towards the head of the fjord, the ablation area decreases as the surface steepens. A good example is seen in the behaviour of the M’Carty Glacier, which has been receding at an accelerating rate up a fjord of almost constant width. Equilibrium may not be reached till the terminus has withdrawn onto the land where there are no calving losses. The retreat can be much more rapid than the advance as the equivalent of several years’ accumulation may be dissipated in one year.
In a fjord that widens towards its head a glacier that has started to retreat will tend to continue an accelerating retreat as its wastage increases (Fig. 7B). An example is Glacier Bay where, as has been suggested above, the maximum position was reached after the firn limit had started to rise. With the firn limit continuing to rise, the stage was set for a catastrophic recession as ablation would have increased as the widening ice front withdrew up the bay.
In fjords that narrow towards their heads, recession is likely to be slow and unspectacular.
Conclusions
The known behaviour of Alaskan fjord glaciers agrees well with that to be expected according to theory. The spectacular retreats and anomalous advances in time of rising firn limits have been at least partially explained. Since firn limits have been rising since the glaciers were first seen there is no first-hand knowledge of their behaviour when firn limits were falling. Terminal moraines, however, showing where equilibrium was reached after a period of advance, are usually found where the termini could expand.
Glaciers in narrow, level-floored valleys would respond to a fall in the firn limit in a similar manner to fjord glaciers, but after a rise in firn limit they could stagnate in situ as they have no calving termini.