Introduction
The concentration of solutes in glacial melt water reflects the water’s initial source area, the route it has taken through the glacier from that source, and the degree and time of melt-water-moraine contact (Reference LemmensLemmens, 1978). Several researchers have noted that glacial basal ice and waters may be solute rich (Reference Souchez, Souchez, Lorrain and LemmensSouchez and others, 1973, Reference Souchez, Souchez, Lemmens, Lorrain and Tison1978; Reference Vivian and ZumsteinVivian and Zumstein, 1973; Reference Souchez and LorrainSouchez and Lorrain, 1975) and that supraglacial melt water has a low solute concentration (Reference CollinsCollins, 1979). Reference CollinsCollins (1979) and Oerter and others (1978) have also shown that continuous monitoring of electrical conductivity and discharge of glacial melt water near to the snout of a glacier can form a basis for separating rapidly draining melt water without significant chemical enrichment from delayed, chemically enriched water, including ground water. Reference CollinsCollins (1979) termed these “englacial” and “subglacial” flow contributions respectively, and formalized a simple two-component mixing model to explain temporal variations in the quantity and quality of bulk melt waters emerging from a glacier. Reference RaiswellRaiswell (1984) has recently presented chemical models capable of explaining the hydrochemical evolution of the two components in terms of their open-system (englacial) and closed-system (subglacial) characteristics.
Previous studies of the electrical conductivity of pro-glacial streams have invariably concentrated on temporal variations observed at single sites. It is contended here that information on joint space–time variations in electrical conductivity is important in relation to the identification of the sources, flow routes, and flow rates of glacial outflow waters, and also in relation to the determination of the nature and extent of spatial variation in solute concentrations in glacier basins. The latter aspect has so far received little attention, apart from some brief reports on variations in electrical conductivity along pro-glacial streams (Reference Lemmens and RogerLemmens and Roger, 1978, and in discussion of Reference MetcalfMetcalf, 1979). The present paper examines space–time variations of electrical conductivity measured at multiple sites on the pro-glacial stream network of glacier de Tsidjiore Nouve, Valais, Switzerland. Three space-time scales of electrical conductivity variations are considered: single-site variations at 1 h intervals over two months; multiple-site variations at 1 h intervals over 12 h periods; and multiple-site variations at 24 h and 48 h intervals over monthly periods.
Field Area and Methods
Melt water from glacier de Tsidjiore Nouve is collected as part of a hydro-electric power scheme developed by Grande Dixence S.A. The water intake is located approximately 360 m from the glacier snout and serves as a flow-gauging station with a catchment area of 4.8 km2. Eleven sites were established on the pro-glacial stream network above the water intake and main monitoring station (Fig. 1) in order to study spatial and temporal variations in the electrical conductivity of the pro-glacial run-off. In practice, at a given time, the electrical conductivity was found to be invariant along the main channel once water from the tributary streams was completely mixed (a maximum difference of 0.5 µS cm−1was found between site 3 and the water intake for simultaneous sampling), and so there will be no discussion here of results from the main channel sites 2 to 5 inclusive. Observations at site 1 (1981) and at the intake and the main monitoring station (1978) will be used to represent the electrical conductivity in the main channel and will be compared with observations from sites 6 to 11 on tributary streams to the main channel.
In order to facilitate the examination of patterns in electrical conductivity at a range of spatial and temporal scales, water samples were collected from the sites identified in Figure. 1 through the following sampling schemes:
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(1) Continuous records of electrical conductivity and discharge were collected at the water intake from 14.00 h on 6 June to 24.00 h on 30 July 1978 and a series of hourly instantaneous values of electrical conductivity and discharge were abstracted for further analysis. Malfunctioning of the instrumentation precluded the collection of similar records in 1981.
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(2) Hour-to-hour spatial patterns of electrical conductivity were monitored by hand sampling over 12 h periods at sites 7, 8, 9, and 1 on four days during July 1981.
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(3) Day-to-day trends in the spatial pattern of conductivity were monitored by hand sampling from the main stream (sites 1 to 5) and from the tributary outflow streams (sites 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, and 11) at 13.00 h on alternate days throughout July 1981 and by sampling at the main monitoring station and on the tributary streams (sites 6, 7, 8, and 9) at 11.00 h every day throughout July 1978.
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(4) Suspended-sediment concentration was also monitored at all of the sites and time scales; the results have been presented in Reference GurnellGurnell (1982) and Reference Gurnell and FennGurnell and Fenn (1984[a]). Information on suspended-sediment concentration will only be included in the present paper where it is pertinent to the discussion of the pattern in electrical conductivity.
Hand sampling was achieved by collecting water samples in polypropylene bottles from the stream thalweg, starting with the up-stream sites and working down-stream. The time taken to sample all of the sites was kept as short as possible so that the samples could be viewed as having been simultaneously collected. The electrical conductivity of the unfiltered samples was determined in the order of sample collection as soon as all of the samples had been collected. The maximum temperature of the water samples at the time of electrical conductivity determination was 2° C, and so correction of electrical conductivity to a fixed temperature was thought to be unnecessary; the uncorrected observations will be presented here. When compared with one another, these observations may be subject to an approximate 4% error as a result of differences in water temperature. Continuous monitoring of electrical conductivity was achieved within the water intake with a probe fixed near to the centre of the flow and well beneath the water surface. The continuous observations also were not corrected to a fixed temperature.
Although measurements of discharge at all of the sampling sites would have made a substantial contribution to the interpretation of electrical conductivity variations, such measurements were deemed to be logistically impossible to undertake. Moreover, given the highly turbulent and shifting bed characteristics typical of pro-glacial streams (Reference FahnestockFahnestock, 1963; Reference Østrem, Jopling and McDonaldØstrem, [c1975]), velocity-area gauging techniques are invariably less than accurate as well as time consuming, while dilution gauging was considered unsuitable given an interest in conductivity characteristics. Continuous measurements of discharge from the Tsidjiore Nouve gauging structure at the water intake were, therefore, the only flow records available. Visual observations of relative flow levels in the tributary streams were, however, also noted in the field in order to provide an indication of relative stream-flow in the tributaries.
Results
Results from the measurement schemes described above are presented as follows:
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(i) Hourly instantaneous monitoring at the water intake.
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(ii) Spatial sampling: 1 h sampling interval.
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(iii) Spatial sampling: 24 h and 48 h sampling interval.
Hourly instantaneous monitoring at the water intake
Figure. 2 shows the time series of hourly-instantaneous discharge and electrical conductivity measured at the water intake from 7 June to 30 July elsewhere in the Alps during the summer ablation period (Reference Behrens and BehrensBehrens and others, 1971; Reference CollinsCollins, 1979). There were ablation-related, diurnal discharge cycles, particularly after 10 July, and approximately inverse diurnal cycles in electrical conductivity similar to those observed in other pro-glacial streams Oerter and others, 1978; Reference CollinsCollins, 1979) are also clearly discernible. Nevertheless, it is evident that the diurnal rhythm was missing or heavily damped throughout most of June and early July as a consequence of a high residual winter snow-cover on the glacier and additional summer snow-fall events causing flow recession periods from 16 to 19 June, from 24 to 27 June, and from 4 to 9 July.
The bivariate relationship between flow discharge and electrical conductivity (Fig. 3) displays the familiar inverse tendency. Reference CollinsCollins (1979) has explained the inverse relationship between discharge and electrical conductivity in terms of the mixing of solute-enriched, subglacially routed water and relatively solute-free, englacially routed water. For the Gornera, the mixing ratios have been shown to be so variable on both diurnal and seasonal time scales that joint values of discharge and electrical conductivity may be demonstrably better described by the margins of a trapezium than by a straight line, such is the range of solute concentrations which may be associated with a given discharge (Reference CollinsCollins, 1979). The Tsidjiore Nouve data, in contrast, display a relatively well-defined pattern, indicating a more conservative relationship between variations in stream-flow and electrical conductivity than that reported for the Gornera. The relationship between electrical conductivity (v) and discharge (Q) presented in Figure. 3 is markedly non-linear, suggesting either the flushing of solutes at high flows (in association with the extension and/or re-organization of the subglacial drainage system across fresh zones of rock debris) or the enhanced acquisition of extra solutes at low flows (in association with longer melt-water–moraine contact times).
Quantitative analysis of the relationship between electrical conductivity and discharge reveals further noteworthy features of the Tsidjiore Nouve data. A rating model of the form σ = a − blog10 Q (derived by regression analysis where a and b are constants) achieved a coefficient of determination of 0.91, but yielded highly autocorrelated residuals (Durbin Watson statistic = 0.08, n = 1307), indicating more than a simple linear relationship between the two time series. The cross-correlation function of the two data series after first differencing (Figure. 4, differencing was applied to remove the trend between the series, so highlighting other characteristics) shows that the diurnal cycles in the two time series are out of phase with one another and are rather different in form. Peaks of positive correlation between the two series occur when discharge is lagged by +15 h and –6 to –7 h in relation to conductivity, and peaks of inverse correlation (with discharge peaks associated with conductivity "troughs") are achieved by either a +2 h or –21 h lag of the discharge series, with a secondary peak also occurring at +4 h. The best (inverse) match position occurs at +2 h and there is a clear 24 h periodicity in the cross-correlation function.
As a result of the high cross correlation between the two time series, a Box–Jenkins transfer function (Reference Box and JenkinsBox and Jenkins, 1970) was preferred to a simple regression model as a means of summarizing the relationship between the two series. The transfer function which best represented the relationship between the two time series was found to be:
This function is similar to a traditional rating curve but it incorporates a delay time, indicating that the time series are not perfectly out of phase, and it illustrates the importance of preceding conductivity (which in turn is dependent upon past discharge) in addition to discharge variation in estimating current conductivity levels. Reference to Figure. 2 confirms that, where diurnal cycles of discharge and electrical conductivity are clearly defined, the two variables are indeed not perfectly out of phase but, in all but one of the diurnal cycles, the peak of electrical conductivity falls on the rising limb of the discharge hydrograph.
The present authors have previously suggested that this pattern may be explained in terms of routing and storage effects superimposed upon the mixing of water from “englacial” and “subglacial” source areas (Reference Gurnell and FennGurnell and Fenn, 1984[b]). The conduit system of the glacier may be regarded as a temporary reservoir in which mixing and enrichment of waters may take place. The peaking of electrical conductivity on the rising limb of the diurnal discharge hydrograph may be explained by the evacuation of waters of relatively high conductivity, held in the conduit system during low flows, in advance of the diurnal input of freshly ablated waters. The conduit system of most glaciers probably incorporates subsystems possessing distinctive routing characteristics: Reference Campbell and RasmussenCampbell and Rasmussen (1973), for example, suggested that most glaciers probably have multiple transport waves migrating through them at any time. In many glaciers these subsystems do not merge within the glacier but emerge at separate portal streams which mix at some distance from the snout in the pro-glacial zone. In such cases, surveys of the quantity–quality characteristics of tributary outflows may provide valuable insights into the nature and performance of the hydrological system of the glacier, and may provide a useful means of interpreting the quantity–quality characteristics of post-mixing bulk melt waters. The results of such a survey follow. It is also noteworthy that the marked diurnal cycles of Figure. 4, which were also present in the autocorrelation functions for the two individual time series, suggest that, if less frequent sampling were required to identify longer-term patterns, then a 24 h sampling interval would be adequate.
Spatial sampling; 1 h sampling interval
Figure. 5 presents the results of sampling electrical conductivity and suspended-sediment concentration on the three main tributary streams issuing from the snout of glacier de Tsidjiore Nouve (sites 7, 8, and 9) and on the main stream (site 1) during four separate 12 h periods in July 1981. Several properties of the spatial pattern in electrical conductivity can be identified from Figure. 5:
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(1) The tributary and main-stream sites exhibited decreasing electrical conductivity during the day as discharge increased. In some cases there was a slight increase in conductivity early in the sampling period before the general decrease. Minimum discharge in the main stream occurred at 7.00 h on 2 July and at 8.00 h on the other three days, while the peak of electrical conductivity occurred up to two hours after the discharge minimum in the main stream (site 1). This lag corresponds well with the 2 h lag of the cross-correlation function of Figure. 4. The three tributaries achieved an electrical conductivity maximum at lags ranging from 0 h to 2 h after the main-stream discharge minimum and at leads ranging from 0 h to 2 h before the main-stream conductivity maximum. A maximum difference of 2 h was observed between the timing of peak conductivity at the four sites during the four days. The general decline in electrical conductivity at all of the four sites during the 12 h periods was consistent with the timing of the falling component of the diurnal conductivity cycles identified at the water intake over a much longer sampling period, as discussed in the preceding section.
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(2) The electrical conductivity at site 1 was an approximate average of the concurrent conductivity of the tributaries and was virtually identical to simultaneous observations at sites 2 and 3. This suggests good mixing of water from the tributaries. There was also an apparent trend during the four days of generally increasing conductivity at site 8 and decreasing conductivity at sites 7 and 9, leading to an overall decrease in conductivity at site 1.
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(3) An interesting detail of Figure. 5 is the low in conductivity on tributary 8 at 13.00 h on 10 July, followed by a conductivity high on tributary 7 at 14.00 h on the same day. A sudden increase of 14% in the main-stream discharge at 15.00 h on the same day was caused by a sudden outburst of water in tributary 7. Figure. 5 shows that this outburst was accompanied by an enormous increase in suspended-sediment concentration in tributary 7, from less than 4000 mg 1−1at 13.00 h to over 14 000 mg 1−1at 15.00 h.
These observations of conductivity variations at four sites show that there are marked differences in conductivity between sites within individual days, but that the diurnal cycles of conductivity observed on the main stream have very similar timing to those in the tributaries. It appears, therefore, that measurements of conductivity taken nearly simultaneously at separate sites form an accurate basis for identifying spatial variations in conductivity in the stream system. The data presented in this section have shown the nature of the spatial patterns in conductivity that occur over an hourly time-scale. As noted earlier, measurements of conductivity taken at 24 h intervals yield data which are largely independent of diurnal variation and so may be used to identify longer-term patterns. Such patterns are described in the next section.
Spatial sampling: 24 h and 48 h sampling interval
Figures 6 and 7 show spatial patterns in electrical conductivity on a one-day sampling interval in July 1978 and a two-day sampling interval in July 1981. Site 11 (sampled in 1981) was the only site entirely supplied by ground water from a spring in the old lateral moraine bordering the pro-glacial stream, although site 6 had no overland contribution of flow from the glacier after 6 July in the 1981 study period. Several characteristics of Figures 6 and 7 are noteworthy:
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(1) There was an inverse relationship between electrical conductivity and discharge in the main stream (site 1 and the main monitoring station).
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(2) The tributary sampling sites, apart from site 11, showed great similarity in their electrical conductivity during periods of high discharge (for example 17 to 30 July 1978 and 6 to 16 July 1981), and showed considerable differences in their electrical conductivity at times of low discharge (for example 1 to 13 July 1978 and 19 to 28 July 1981).
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(3) Site 11 exhibited the highest electrical conductivity measured and may be taken to provide an indication of the electrical conductivity of long residence time, “subglacial” water in the remaining tributaries.
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(4) Assuming that the electrical conductivity at each sampling site reflects the proportion of the flow contributed by “englacial” and “subglacial” flow contributions of approximately constant conductivity (as defined by Reference CollinsCollins, 1979), then there appear to be substantial changes in these proportions in different tributaries within and between ablation seasons, since the electrical conductivity of the mixed water from these source areas did not remain constant at each sampling site. For example, there was a progressive divergence in conductivity between sites 8 and 6 and sites 7, 9, and 10 during July 1981, particularly up to 16 July. In addition, the relative magnitude of electrical conductivity in the three main tributaries changed from 7 > 8 > 9 in 1978 to 8 > 9 > 7 in 1981. This inter-seasonal change cannot be explained simply by adjustments in tributary discharge using a simple mixing model, because tributary 7 carried by far the most water throughout July 1978 and after 9 July 1981. In addition, in both years all of the supraglacial streams draining across the snout of the glacier contributed to the flow in tributary 7.
Summary, Discussion, and Conclusions
Analyses of hourly instantaneous observations of electrical conductivity and discharge at the water intake, and hourly spatial sampling over 12 h periods, indicated that diurnal cycles were present in the data and that cycles in electrical conductivity occurred with approximately the same timing throughout the pro-glacial stream network. From this it was concluded that simultaneous sampling every 24 h would be adequate to identify longer-term temporal patterns in electrical conductivity.
Information from all temporal scales indicated an approximate inverse relationship between electrical conductivity and discharge, but detailed analysis of over 50 days of hourly observations of the two variables showed that the relationship was not perfectly inverse. Diurnal cycles existed in both series, although these were slightly different in form between the two series. The cross-correlation function between the first differenced electrical conductivity and the log10 transformed discharge series showed that the two series were not perfectly out of phase, but that, on average, this could be achieved by lagging the discharge forward by two hours.
Spatial observations of electrical conductivity on tributaries to the main pro-glacial stream in July 1978 and July 1981 showed that there was no simple relationship between levels of conductivity in the tributaries and in the main stream. Although the electrical conductivity of the main stream was always near the centre of the range of concurrent electrical conductivity in the tributaries, complementary shifts in tributary conductivity could be identified between seasons, between days, and for a short period within one of the days of 12 h spatial sampling. These shifts were usually gradual and, if electrical conductivity represents the mixing of “englacial” and “subglacial” flow components of roughly constant conductivity, then these changes can be interpreted in terms of the gradual rerouting of one or both of these components before reaching the snout of the glacier. The gradual decrease in electrical conductivity in tributaries 7 and 9, and the concurrent increase in electrical conductivity of tributary 7 during July 1981, could be explained by rerouting of the “englacial” flow component. This hypothesis is reinforced by the fact that during this period a clear increase in discharge was observed in tributary 7 relative to flow in the other tributaries. Moreover, the abrupt complementary changes in conductivity in tributaries 7 and 8 during 10 July 1981, and the observed sudden increase in discharge and suspended-sediment concentration in tributary 7, could be explained by a rapid form of the same mechanism; a sudden rerouting of “englacial” water from one tributary to the other. The less sudden observed decrease in discharge in tributary 8 on the same day and the sudden increase in tributary 7 could be explained by temporary storage of some of the water during this rerouting. Finally, there was a major decrease in the electrical conductivity of tributary 7 between 1978 and 1981 in spite of the fact that this was the tributary with the highest discharge for almost all of the observation period in both years. The “englacial” – “subglacial” mixing model would suggest that this change resulted from a shift in the drainage pattern of “subglacial” water, since variations in only the “englacial” component for a tributary with the highest discharge in both years could not explain such a major change in electrical conductivity level relative to the levels in other tributaries.
The simple two-reservoir mixing model forms a useful context in which to interpret the observations of electrical conductivity under discussion. The temporal electrical conductivity patterns in tributary streams draining the snout of glacier de Tsidjiore Nouve are not identical with the pattern exhibited in the main stream, and, under the two-reservoir model, these differences may be explained in terms of spatial and temporal variations in the storage and routing of melt-water drainage from the glacier. It seems likely that the form and size of the area of the glacier contributing to discharge in each tributary varies greatly over time and is not confined to variations in the source areas of water of low electrical conductivity (“englacial” water). The variation in contributing area will influence both the amount and the proportions of water from “englacial” and “subglacial” source areas mixing in the flow of the tributaries and also the potential drainage routes to each tributary. These factors clearly exert major controls on the electrical conductivity of the water in each tributary. The authors believe that the temporal variations in the size and location of “englacial” and “subglacial” source areas feeding each tributary provide the primary explanation of the observed patterns in electrical conductivity. Nevertheless, it is accepted that component flow contributions are unlikely to display absolutely constant electrical conductivity and it is clear that variations in the conductivity, as well as the discharge, of waters from different source areas would generate variations in outflow conductivity. Modification of the conductivity characteristics of waters during transit to the outflow streams would have similar effects. It is accepted that the operation of effects other than those proposed in the explanations given here may well be partially responsible for generating the patterns in conductivity observed in the pro-glacial stream system. In fact, the authors are convinced that residence time and routing of flaws through the glacier have effects on the observed electrical conductivity and that the main conduit system within the glacier may usefully be considered to be a third reservoir where mixing and enrichment of the water may take place (Reference Gurnell and FennGurnell and Fenn, 1984[b]). Nevertheless, they believe these effects to be of only secondary importance in controlling the observed pattern of electrical conductivity in the pro-glacial stream network to the primary control of the mixing of “englacial” and “subglacial” flow components of very different conductivity. Such a view would appear to conform to that of Reference RaiswellRaiswell (1984).
Acknowledgements
This research was undertaken while one of the authors (C.R.F.) was in receipt of a United Kingdom Natural Environment Research Council research studentship. Grande Dixence S.A., particularly Ingrs Bezinge, Dayer, Arlettaz, and Mudry, are gratefully acknowledged for the provision of discharge data and field assistance. Dr J. Gurnell and Mr C. MarMolinero gave very helpful criticisms of an early version of the manuscript.