- Starvation (glaciology)
In
glaciology , starvation is said to occur when aglacier retreat s not because oftemperature increases, but due to precipitation being so low that ice flow downwards into the zone of ablation exceeds the replenishment from snowfall. Eventually, the ice will move so far down that it either calves into theocean or melts.When starvation does occur, however, it can almost always be reversed by slight changes in precipitation, such as are brought about by
mountain ranges. Thus, even if glaciers do not cover a lowland due to low precipitation, glaciation is almost certain to occur at higher elevations.Occurrences
Starvation of continental
ice sheets is known to have occurred during the period "before" theLast Glacial Maximum in many areas ofCanada and theWest Siberian Plain .It is thought that, after the end of the
Eemian Interglacial , continental ice sheets first formed near or beyond their northern margins (that is, in the extreme northwest ofSiberia and the Yukon territory,Northwest Territories andNunavut inNorth America ). However, as an ice sheet advances, precipitation at its centre (known as a "dome") tends to become very low because high-pressure systems form due to the very cold temperatures above the ice. This meant that at the northern edge of the ice sheets, there was almost no replenishment of the ice, and as it fell to lower elevations, even if it did not melt, it was not being replaced.Thus, as the continental ice sheets of
Quaternary glaciations advanced south according to each Milankovitch cycle, their northern edges were starved and it is believed that starvation caused them to retreat substantially "southward" by the time the southern limits of maximum glaciation were approached. Of course, in areas such as theRussian Far East , eastern Siberia andBeringia , glaciers were, in effect, starved before they could form at all.Some have also argued that starvation, as well as increasing temperatures, played a significant role in the decay of continental ice sheets after the LGM. The argument is that as fresh water from the melting edges of the ice sheet reached the sea, the flow of warm water which fed the ice sheets was stopped and deglaciation during the
summer accelerated. This, however, is a highly controversial position.Starvation of glaciers is believed to have occurred during the
Little Ice Age in parts ofAlaska , theHimalaya s and theKarakoram . This is because these glaciers do not follow the general global patters of glacial advance during warm periods and retreat during cold periods, which would imply that their size is "controlled" by the amount of precipitation they receive, for temperatures are so low that the increases deemed like from, say,global warming would fail to melt them to any degree whatsoever.Further reading
* cite book
last = Pielou
first = E.C.
authorlink =
coauthors =
year = 1991
title = After the Ice Age: The Return of Life to Glaciated North America
publisher = University of Chicago Press
location =
id = ISBN 0-226-66811-8External links
* [http://www.episodes.org/backissues/234/230-246%20Petit.pdf Maps of the world environments]
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