6533b85ffe1ef96bd12c196a

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Proglacial sediment dynamics from daily to seasonal scales in a glaciated Alpine catchment (Bossons glacier, Mont Blanc massif, France)

Jean-françois BuoncristianiJean-françois BuoncristianiHervé GuillonHervé GuillonHervé GuillonJean-louis MugnierJean-louis Mugnier

subject

Hydrologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_category010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesGeography Planning and DevelopmentSedimentGlacier15. Life on land010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciences6. Clean waterParaglacial13. Climate actionDrainage system (geomorphology)Outwash plainEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)Suspended loadGlacial periodSedimentary budgetGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface Processes

description

The sediment yields of Alpine catchments are commonly determined from streamload measurements made some distance downstream from glaciers. However, this approach indiscriminately integrates erosion processes occurring in both the glacial and proglacial areas. A specific method is required to ascertain the respective inputs from (i) subglacial and supraglacial sediments, (ii) proglacial hillslopes and (iii) proglacial alluvial areas or sandurs. This issue is addressed here by combining high‐resolution monitoring (2 min) of suspended sediment concentrations at different locations within a catchment with discharge gauging and precipitation data. This methodological framework is applied to two proglacial streams draining the Bossons glacier (Mont Blanc massif, France): the Bossons and Crosette streams. For the Bossons stream, discharge and suspended load data were acquired from June to October 2013 at 1.15 and 1.5 km from the glacial terminus, respectively upstream and downstream from a small valley sandur. These hydro‐sedimentary data are compared with the Crosette stream dataset acquired at the outlet of the Bossons glacier subglacial drainage system. A fourfold analysis focusing on seasonal changes in streamload and discharge, multilinear regression modelling, evaluation of the sandur flux balance and probabilistic uncertainty assessment is used to determine the catchment sediment budget and to explain the proglacial sediment dynamics. The seasonal fluctuation of the sediment signal observed is related to the gradual closing of the subglacial drainage network and to the role of the proglacial area in the sediment cascade: the proglacial hillslopes appear to be disconnected from the main channel and the valley sandur acts as a hydrodynamic sediment buffer both daily and seasonally. Our findings show that an understanding of proglacial sediment dynamics can help in evaluating paraglacial adjustment and subglacial erosion processes.

https://doi.org/10.1002/esp.4333