| Literature DB >> 27879883 |
Adina E Racoviteanu1,2,3, Mark W Williams4,5, Roger G Barry4,6.
Abstract
The increased availability of remote sensing platforms with appropriate spatial and temporal resolution, global coverage and low financial costs allows for fast, semi-automated, and cost-effective estimates of changes in glacier parameters over large areas. Remote sensing approaches allow for regular monitoring of the properties of alpine glaciers such as ice extent, terminus position, volume and surface elevation, from which glacier mass balance can be inferred. Such methods are particularly useful in remote areas with limited field-based glaciological measurements. This paper reviews advances in the use of visible and infrared remote sensing combined with field methods for estimating glacier parameters, with emphasis on volume/area changes and glacier mass balance. The focus is on the Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) sensor and its applicability for monitoring Himalayan glaciers. The methods reviewed are: volumetric changes inferred from digital elevation models (DEMs), glacier delineation algorithms from multi-spectral analysis, changes in glacier area at decadal time scales, and AAR/ELA methods used to calculate yearly mass balances. The current limitations and on-going challenges in using remote sensing for mapping characteristics of mountain glaciers also discussed, specifically in the context of the Himalaya.Entities:
Keywords: ASTER; DEM; Himalaya; glaciers; mass balance; remote sensing
Year: 2008 PMID: 27879883 PMCID: PMC3675549 DOI: 10.3390/s8053355
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1.An example of the relationship between accumulation area ratio and mass balance, used to derive the steady-state AAR for Shaune Garang and Gor Garang glaciers [105].
Figure 2.Study area showing surveyed sites during the 2006 field campaign (red stars) and additional validation sites proposed for the 2007 field campaign (black circles), shown on a MODIS mosaic.
Figure 3.Coverage of the 2006 Data Acquisition Request (DAR) submitted by the GLIMS team, showing the 115 ASTER scenes acquired during Sept – Nov 2006.
Figure 4.Mass-balance at Chhota Shigri glacier as a function of altitude, derived from 4 years of field-based measurements on various glacier tributaries. Courtesy of IRD France, reproduced from [30].
Figure 5.Results of the classification algorithm for clean ice in Northern Sikkim, from 2001 ASTER imagery. Arrows point to: a) clean ice correctly classified; b) shadowed glacier correctly classified; c) pro-glacial lakes mis-classified as glacier; d) internal rock correctly delineated.