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Matt Nolan
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Wednesday, 18 June 2008 03:49
Day 56-57: Typical weather for the terminus
The glacier is just a visitor to this valley, and nowhere is this more obvious than at the terminus. Where the glacier has recently been is a jumble of debris where once was order, like the aftermath of Turner visiting his toy box. Hunks of rocks are strewn all over the place, some stranded in high places, some washed continuously in the river, and everywhere in between. Apparently the party is not completely over, as we witnessed a boulder the size of a school bus tumble down the mountain, catching air and doing flips before crashing into the valley floor not far from us. This is where geomorphology comes alive and works on time-scale faster than glacier motion.
Jason and I were up at 6AM yesterday to begin staging equipment for our trip to the terminus, by shuttling a load...
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Monday, 16 June 2008 03:37
Day 55: Slush flow announces the true start of summer!
Summer truly arrived today with an enormous slush flow which opened the main stream on the glacier. Slush flows are like low angle avalanches. Water slowly saturates the snow and makes it heavier and more fluid. At a certain point, the weight of the water can no longer be held back by the snow matrix and gravity takes over. Over the past few days we had been watching meltwater pool up within the stream channel from last year. This morning there was standing water visible within a large section of it. I set up a time-lapse camera hoping to capture it, and about 10PM it happened. I was in my work tent preparing for a few days of work at the terminus when I heard a loud roar. I ran out and saw a wall of slush and water working its way downglacier. We all stood and watched as the peak rushed p...
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Sunday, 15 June 2008 03:31
Day 52-54: Studying lenses of ice and glass
Our primary occupation the past few days has been studying lenses. Jason is studying ice lenses within the firn, and I’m studying glass lenses on my camera. It’s difficult to say who’s job is harder, but I suspect it’s Jason’s.
Ice lenses are layers of ice that form within the snow. The surface of the snow warms up from the sun, melts, then drips into snow beneath it. When this water hits colder snow, it tends to freeze. When it does, it prevents more meltwater from dripping down further, since the ice is too dense for water to flow through. So the additional water has to spread out to the sides, where it too will find colder snow and freeze. This goes on throughout the day (or spring), such that wide layers of ice form within the snow. We call these ice lenses. As...
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Thursday, 12 June 2008 02:34
Day 51: Sun + Snow = Clouds, at least in summer
Sunshine melts snow, but it also turns it into vapor which tends to rise and later condense into clouds. At McCall Glacier, we have the neat opportunity of watching this happen before our eyes. Today was a sunny, clear day, at least on the synoptic scale of regional weather. But once the sun rose high enough to increase its energy flux to the surface, it began creating clouds locally. Because our camp sits within a bowl shaped valley, we can watch the sun as it swings from the east to the west in a big circle and heats up the backside of our valley walls. So when the sun is in the east, we see clouds forming directly behind our eastern valley wall, and as it swings to the south we see clouds there but not in the east, and so on. To better visualize this, I took a sequence of panoramas thro...
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Wednesday, 11 June 2008 02:30
Day 49-50: Jason sinks his teeth into the firn
One of the questions Jason is trying to answer as part of his PhD is ‘How much of the snow that falls here gets refrozen within the glacier and how we can apply this knowledge to improve our ability to model this process on other glaciers?’ So the past two days Jason and Joey have been busy getting more experienced with the shallow coring drill and developing a plan for measurements for the next few years. It’s a tricky question and one that has not been answered well as yet, largely because it is so tricky to make direct measurements of this internal accumulation of ice. The state of the art paper was written 30 years ago, based in part on research done on McCall Glacier. So it seems like there is still a lot of progress that can be made if the right work plan could be developed. Ou...
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Monday, 09 June 2008 02:23
Day 48: Installing survey stakes to measure index velocities
We left early again today to install two more stakes, this time in locations we have previously installed stakes. The glacier is always in motion, and in these locations it moves about 15 meters per year. This means the stake we installed last year is now 15 meters down-glacier. We keep installing poles at the same initial location so that we can track how the glacier’s speed is changing with time. We cant just keep measuring the same pole because the glacier’s speed varies with location, and as the pole moves into a new location its speed will change. In this case the fastest moving part of the glacier is about 2/3s of the way towards the terminus, above and below this it moves slower. By installing poles each year in the same initial location, we can then tell whether that part of th...
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Sunday, 08 June 2008 02:14
Day 45-47: Spring arrives on the glacier
Like a switch was flipped, we changed from winter to spring, in several ways. A few feet of fresh snow had fallen during the last week of May and early June. Then we had 3 days of warm, mostly sunny weather, just long enough to get the drill gear and team out and the newest member of team in. By the time Dirk took off with our final load of gear, a serious rain had begun and spring was here – the snow was melting, the streams were running, and we began scrambling to catch up on all of the winter work we had wanted to get done in the past month but just didn’t have the time or weather. With this new weather also came a change in work dynamics, with just five us now and all focused on our process studies, we are a much leaner and more focused team, concentrated on supporting Jason’s pr...
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Thursday, 05 June 2008 06:26
Day 43-44: Meet the grad students (from Poland, Japan, and Alaska)
There are three graduate students on this trip: Darek Ignatiuk, Ryo Kusaka, and Jason Geck. Our project is part of the IPY Glaciodyn effort, an international project focusing on the role of arctic glaciers in the global system, involving more than a dozen countries. To facilitate exchange of ideas and comparisons between glacier systems, as part of this larger project we try to exchange personnel on field trips whenever possible, and Darek and Ryo are part of that exchange.
Darek is from Poland and is a graduate student at the University of Silesia in Katowice, studying under Dr. Jacek Jania. His interests are broadly based but have an emphasis on surface energy and mass balance. His primary glacier field work has been in Svalbard, working on glaciers around the Polish Polar...
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Tuesday, 03 June 2008 06:17
Day 41-42: Final camp move, a little more coring, and the last of the ice leaves
With the deep drilling finished, it was time to start transitioning fully into our process studies on McCall Glacier. What we are particularly interested in this year is the fate of surface snow melt. How much of this drips into the snow pack and refreezes? How much reaches the bottom the glacier and helps the glacier move faster? To answer these questions we are planning to track this meltwater throughout the year. We will do this by repeatedly coring the upper 10 meters or so of snow in the accumulation areas, and by studying the stream at the outlet of the glacier. This is logistically complicated because these two areas are at opposite ends of the glacier – the very top and the very bottom. Separated by seven kilometers, this means a lot of hiking back and forth to try to watch both ...
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Sunday, 01 June 2008 06:10
Day 39-40: Final hole complete!
Jason and I were near our second camp location installing a continuously-recording D-GPS system on the ice when we heard Darek’s voice on the radio “We finished!” The third and final hole of this trip was completed. We quickly finished hooking up the wires and cables for the GPS system and confirmed it was working, then headed up to lower cirque to drop down our thermistor string.
Yesterday had been largely a bust in terms of drilling, as well as most other things. The weather continued to remain snowy and windy, and conditions on the glacier were poor for travel as the snow was deep, the trail drifted over, and visibility was frequently zero. I used one break in the weather to pack down the skiway, but that was the extent of my travel away from camp. The drill team tr...
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