GLACIAL OUTBURST FLOOD / AVALANCHE
- February 8, 2021
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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GLACIAL OUTBURST FLOOD / AVALANCHE
Subject: Geography
Context : A glacial lake burst, a cloud burst or an avalanche, the impact of climate change or “development” — scientists are not sure what triggered the sudden surge of water near Chamoli in Uttarakhand Sunday morning that briefly raised fears of a repeat of the 2013 disaster in the state.
Concept:
Glacial Lake Outburst Flood
- A glacial lake outburst flood (GLOF) is a release of meltwater from a moraine– or ice-dam glacial lake due to dam failure.
- GLOFs often result in catastrophic flooding downstream, with major geomorphic and socioeconomic impacts.
GLOFs have three main features:
- They involve sudden (and sometimes cyclic) releases of water.
- They tend to be rapid events, lasting hours to days.
- They result in large downstream river discharges (which often increase by an order of magnitude).
Direct Causes
- The following direct causes of glacial lake outburst floods were documented:
- Rapid slope movement into the lake
- Heavy rainfall/snowmelt
- Cascading processes (flood from a lake situated upstream)
- Earthquake
- Melting of ice incorporated in dam/forming the dam (including volcanic activity-triggered jökulhlaups)
- Blocking of subsurface outflow tunnels (applies only to lakes without surface outflow or lakes with a combination of surface and subsurface outflow)
- Long-term dam degradation
Glacial Lakes
- There are two main settings in which glacial lakes form:
- Behind moraine dams
- Behind ice dams.
Moraine Dammed Lakes
- When a glacier retreats, it can leave behind a large impression in the ground that fills with water, turning it into a lake.This is typically known as a moraine.
- Moraine-dammed lakes form during periods of glacier retreat from a moraine.
- As a glacier margin retreats, water collects in the topographic low between the ice-front and the abandoned frontal and/or lateral moraine.
- These lakes can be impounded by an unstable pile of debris and buried ice.
- Most existing moraine-dammed lakes were formed when mountain glaciers began to retreat from large moraine ridges constructed during the Little Ice Age.
Ice Dammed Lakes
- In contrast to moraine-dammed lakes, ice-dammed lakes form when drainage is blocked by a glacier that advances or becomes thicker.
- Consequently, ice-dammed lake growth is closely related to glacier mass balance and climate.
- Ice-dammed lakes form wherever a glacier blocks the drainage of meltwater.
AVALANCHE
- Avalanche is a rapid downslope movement of a large detached mass of snow, ice, and associated debris such as rocks and vegetation.
- Small avalanches, or Sluffs, occur in large numbers, while large avalanches that may encompass slopes a kilometer or more in length with millions of tons of snow, occur infrequently but cause most of the damage.
- Humans have been exposed to the threat of sliding snow for as long as they have inhabited mountainous regions.
Types of Avalanches:
- Loose snow avalanches-formed in snow with little internal cohesion among individual snow crystals.
- Slab avalanches-Originate in snow with sufficient internal cohesion to enable a snow layer, or layers, to react mechanically as a single entity.
- Wet snow avalanches-These move more slowly than dry ones and are seldom accompanied by dust clouds.
- Direct action avalanches –These are the immediate result of a single snowstorm. They usually involve only fresh snow.
- Climax avalanches-Result of a series of snowstorms or a culmination of weather influences. Their fall is not necessarily associated with a current storm or weather situation.