View of Llaca Lake, in Peru, taken from an un-crewed aerial vehicle. Credit: Rodrigo Narro Pérez, Author provided
Early in the morning on Dec. 13, 1941, the citizens of Huaraz, Peru, heard a terrifying rumble echo across the valley. Within minutes, a torrent of water, ice and rocks had poured over the city, destroying a third of it and killing at least 2,000 people.
This type of catastrophic event is known as a "glacial lake outburst flood." Glacial lakes, such as those found throughout the Cordillera Blanca in the Andean mountain range, are often dammed by glacial moraines that can reach heights of over 100 meters. They are impressive, but they are often unstable.
The twisted remains of a steel bridge destroyed by a glacial lake outburst flood in Iceland in 1996. Credit: (Chris 73/Wikimedia Commons), CC BY-SA
Geological engineering models use variables such as the size and volume of the lake, height, width and slope of the moraine dam, and channel and valley dimensions to estimate the stability of the moraine dam and the risk of flood. Unfortunately, these models don't include much information about the composition of the moraine dam, which can vary signifcantly depending on on its location and mode of formation.
Using UAV to understand the structure of moraine dams
Glaciers create moraines by transporting, depositing and pushing boulders, sands and fine-grained silts and clays along the valley floor and adjacent valley walls, often forming a barrier. But one moraine may be much more stable than another, depending on the materials it contains and how it is formed.
Water may leak through weak points in the moraine's stacked layers, taking sediment with it, or loose rocks may fall after a disturbance such as an earthquake. These weak points make a complete collapse of the moraine dam more likely. Locating these weak points is an important step in predicting the stability of the lake dams and can allow geoscientists and engineers to design more effective remediation strategies.
Remediation work done at Llaca Lake, Peru, in 1977 included building a dam. Credit: Rodrigo Narro Pérez, Author provided
My colleagues and I are analyzing the architecture of large lateral moraines, which form along the sides of glaciers, in southern Iceland using un-crewed aerial vehicles (UAVs or drones) to collect high-resolution images. We use these images to identify and classify areas of coarse- and fine-grained sediment that may form zones of water leakage and sediment removal and cause the dam to fail. We've planned similar high resolution UAV surveys of moraine dams in the Cordillera Blanca for early 2022.
The research will enhance the reliability of predictive models to identify potential glacial lake flood hazards. It will also identify areas where remediation work, such as the building of additional outlet channels or armored barriers, is most needed to strengthen the moraine.
This will be particularly important as glaciers melt more quickly, the volume of water held by these natural moraine dams builds, and the destructive power of floods also continues to increase. A recent study by researchers at the University of Calgary showed that the volume of water in glacial lakes has increased by 50 percent globally since 1990.
Our research in Peru will provide new insights into moraine dam stability that can be applied to other regions, such as Bolivia, the Himalayas and the Canadian Rockies, which are also experiencing an increased risk of glacial lake outburst floods as climate warming continues to melt glaciers.
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How scientists are using drones to lower the risk of catastrophic flooding from large glacial lakes (2021, June 7)
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