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Study region: The Urumqi River basin located in eastern Tien Shan in Central Aisa Study focus: Glacier runoff plays a pivotal role in water resources and stabilizing streamflow in mountainous regions. To assess the characteristics of glacier ice melt runoff in sub-basins within a single basin, three sub-basins with glacier ratios varying from 4% to 46% in the Urumqi River basin are investigated. Through the simulation by HBV light model on the basis of the observed meteorological and hydrological data. The characteristics and behaviour of glacier ice melt runoff in the three sub-basins are analysed. New hydrological insights for the region: It was found that both the contribution ratios of ice melt runoff and glacier runoff increase linearly with the increasing glacier ratio for the three catchments, rather than logarithmically or exponentially as observed in previous studies. This is due to the relatively high contributions of ice melt and glacier runoff to river flow in a catchment characterized by high elevation and extensive glacier coverage (Catchment 1), resulting from the coincidence of summer precipitation maxima with snow and ice melt in this region. The coefficient of variations (CV) of river flow tends to decrease with the decreasing glacier ratio in subbasins in the Urumqi River basin, indicating that river flow becomes more stable as it flows farther from the headwater in the Urumqi River basin. The lowest glacierized Catchment 3 exhibited the minimum CV value, demonstrating a stable outflow.

期刊论文 2024-07-01 DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejrh.2024.101772

In this study, summer rainfall contributions to streamflow were quantified in the sub-arctic, 30% glacierized Tarfala (21.7km(2)) catchment in northern Sweden for two non-consecutive summer sampling seasons (2004 and 2011). We used two-component hydrograph separation along with isotope ratios (O-18 and D) of rainwater and daily streamwater samplings to estimate relative fraction and uncertainties (because of laboratory instrumentation, temporal variability and spatial gradients) of source water contributions. We hypothesized that the glacier influence on how rainfall becomes runoff is temporally variable and largely dependent on a combination of the timing of decreasing snow cover on glaciers and the relative moisture storage condition within the catchment. The results indicate that the majority of storm runoff was dominated by pre-event water. However, the average event water contribution during storm events differed slightly between both years with 11% reached in 2004 and 22% in 2011. Event water contributions to runoff generally increased over 2011 the sampling season in both the main stream of Tarfala catchment and in the two pro-glacial streams that drain Storglaciaren (the largest glacier in Tarfala catchment covering 2.9km(2)). We credit both the inter-annual and intra-annual differences in event water contributions to large rainfall events late in the summer melt season, low glacier snow cover and elevated soil moisture due to large antecedent precipitation. Together amplification of these two mechanisms under a warming climate might influence the timing and magnitude of floods, the sediment budget and nutrient cycling in glacierized catchments. Copyright (c) 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

期刊论文 2014-01-30 DOI: 10.1002/hyp.9668 ISSN: 0885-6087
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