CONTRIBUTION OF ICING ABLATION TO STREAMFLOW IN A DISCONTINUOUS PERMAFROST AREA

Citation
S. Reedyk et al., CONTRIBUTION OF ICING ABLATION TO STREAMFLOW IN A DISCONTINUOUS PERMAFROST AREA, Canadian journal of earth sciences, 32(1), 1995, pp. 13-20
Citations number
25
Categorie Soggetti
Geosciences, Interdisciplinary
ISSN journal
00084077
Volume
32
Issue
1
Year of publication
1995
Pages
13 - 20
Database
ISI
SICI code
0008-4077(1995)32:1<13:COIATS>2.0.ZU;2-C
Abstract
Icings, present in many small streams in the discontinuous permafrost environment, alter the seasonal water balance by redistributing a comp onent of flow from the winter to the spring. Icing ablation continues to contribute to streamflow after the disappearance of the snowpack an d constitutes an additional source of runoff. The temporal variability and significance of icing ablation to streamflow were examined with a combined water balance and isotope study in a tributary of Manners Cr eek, Northwest Territories. Icing accounted for 20% of the surface wat er available for melt. Over the spring study period, icing ablation ac counted for 6% of total streamflow, while the total surface-water flux provided 8%. Shallow subsurface flow, which consisted of infiltrated snow meltwater and premelt groundwater, contributed the most to stream flow. At the end of the melt period, icing ablation was the only sourc e of surface runoff to the stream and was similar in magnitude to the estimated evapotranspiration loss. Comparison with other studies revea led that on a regional scale, the hydrologic role of icing ablation is controlled by the interaction between the timing of melt, the magnitu de of groundwater recharge, the spatial extent of permafrost, and the depth of seasonal frost.