Tasman Glacier

Tasman Glacier

Upper half of the Tasman Glacier
Type Mountain glacier
Location New Zealand
Coordinates 43°37′S 170°12′E / 43.617°S 170.200°E / -43.617; 170.200Coordinates: 43°37′S 170°12′E / 43.617°S 170.200°E / -43.617; 170.200
Area 101 km2 (39 sq mi)
Length 27 km (17 mi)
Thickness 600 m (2,000 ft)
Terminus Lake Tasman
Status Retreating

The Tasman Glacier[1] is the largest of several glaciers which flow south and east towards the Mackenzie Basin from the Southern Alps in New Zealand's South Island. It is New Zealand's longest glacier.

Geography

At 27 kilometres (17 mi) in length, Tasman Glacier is New Zealand's longest glacier.[2][3][4] It is as much as 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) wide and 600 metres (2,000 ft) thick, and lies entirely within the borders of Aoraki/Mount Cook National Park. The glacier covers an area of 101 square kilometres (39 sq mi) and starts at a height of 3,000 metres (9,800 ft) above sea level. Snowfall during the winter and spring seasons accumulates to 50 metres (160 ft). After the summer melt, 7 metres (23 ft) remains.[3]

Lower Tasman Glacier

The Tasman flows south from the southern slopes of the Minarets peak, along the eastern flank of New Zealand's two highest mountains, Mount Tasman and its higher southern neighbour Aoraki / Mount Cook.

Although its upper reaches are snow-covered, rocks carried by the glacier are exposed by ablation along its course, and the lower glacier is entirely rock-covered. The rock cover helps insulate the ice from the sunlight and slows down the melting process. Tributaries in the lower parts are the Rudolf Glacier,[5] Forrest Ross Glacier, Kaufmann Glacier,[6] Haast Glacier, Hochstetter Glacier,[7] and Ball Glacier.[8]

The glacier is almost met near its end by the meltwater of the Murchison Glacier, which approaches from the northeast before turning to flow beside the Tasman Glacier outside the moraine wall. The waters from both these glaciers pool at the end of the glacier in Lake Tasman, before flowing south to join the outflow from the nearby Hooker and Mueller Glaciers in the wide valley of the Tasman River, whose braided streams flow south into Lake Pukaki. They eventually flow into the Waitaki River and to the Pacific Ocean north of Oamaru.

Recent retreat

Left to right, the Mueller, Hooker and Tasman Glaciers in the Southern Alps, showing major retreat in the ~10 years circa 1990 to 2000. Notice the larger terminal lakes, the retreat of the white ice (ice free of moraine cover, high up on the glaciers), and (more subtly) the increase in height of the moraine walls due to ice thinning.

Between 2000 and 2008, the glacier terminus receded 3.7 km.[9] Since the 1990s the terminus has retreated about 180 metres (590 ft) a year on average. The glacier is now in a period of faster retreat where the rate of retreat is calculated to be between 477 to 822 metres (1,565 to 2,697 ft) each year. It is estimated that the Tasman Glacier will eventually disappear and the terminal Tasman Lake will reach a maximum size in 10 to 19 years time. In 1973 Tasman Glacier had no terminal lake and by 2008 Tasman Lake was 7 kilometres (4.3 mi) long, 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) wide, and 245 metres (804 ft) deep.[10]

A large calving event was possibly triggered, or at least contributed to, by the 2011 Canterbury earthquake on 22 February 2011. On this day 30,000,000 metric tons (33,000,000 short tons) to 40,000,000 metric tons (44,000,000 short tons)[11][12] of ice dropped from the terminal face of the Tasman Glacier and fell into the Tasman Lake. Boats were hit with tsunami waves of up to 3.5 metres (11 ft) as the ice fell into the Tasman Lake under the glacier. Similar events in the past have been attributed to buoyancy effects, a result of high basal water pressures and increased lake level following heavy rainfall events.[11][13]

Access and Tourism

Tasman Glacier terminal face

Tasman Glacier has a long history of tourism, with heli skiing tours offered on the upper glacier since the early 1970s. The tributary Ball Glacier was also popular for skiing, with national championships behing held there in the 1930s.[14] It has since diminished too far to be safely accessed.[15] Similarly, Tasman Glacier's significant ice loss over the past decades has impacted tourism,[16] with an increasing number of crevasses being exposed and not filled in by snow anymore, requiring guided tours to avoid these areas, and restricting the heli skiing season to July, August and September.[17]

The proglacial Tasman Lake is a popular destination for boat tours among the icebergs often floating in the lake. Boats are not allowed closer than 1.5 km (0.9 mi) to the 50 m (160 ft) tall terminal face of Tasman Glacier for safety reasons.[18]

The Ball Shelter Track, part of the Ball Hut Route, leads along the western side of the glacier, separated from Tasman Lake by a tall moraine wall until about 6 kilometres in, where it climbs high enough for the view to open up. At that point, the rock-covered lower Tasman Glacier in the valley between the moraine walls is 2.5 km (1.6 mi) wide.[19]

See also

References/Notes

  1. "Place Name Detail: Tasman Glacier". New Zealand Geographic Placenames Database. Land Information New Zealand. Retrieved 18 April 2008..
  2. "Aoraki/Mount Cook National Park". Tourism New Zealand. Retrieved 14 July 2010.
  3. 1 2 "Aoraki/Mount Cook Education Resource" (PDF). Department of Conservation. 2009. p. 8. Retrieved 14 July 2010.
  4. This excludes glaciers in New Zealand's Antarctic claim, the Ross Dependency.
  5. "Rudolf Glacier, Canterbury". NZ Topo Map. Land Information New Zealand. Retrieved 2016-09-14.
  6. "Kaufmann Glacier, Canterbury". NZ Topo Map. Land Information New Zealand. Retrieved 2016-09-14.
  7. "Hochstetter Glacier, Canterbury". NZ Topo Map. Land Information New Zealand. Retrieved 2016-09-14.
  8. "Ball Glacier, Canterbury". NZ Topo Map. Land Information New Zealand. Retrieved 2016-09-14.
  9. "Twenty-First Century Calving Retreat of Tasman Glacier, Southern Alps, New Zealand".
  10. "Tasman Glacier retreat extreme". Massey University. 23 April 2008. Retrieved 24 April 2008.
  11. 1 2 Staff (22 February 2011). "Quake shakes 30m tonnes of ice off glacier". New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 22 February 2011.
  12. "A 40 Million Tonne Iceberg Dumped in Lake by NZ Earthquake". Important Media Network, Clean Technica. 23 February 2011.
  13. "Earthquake causes glacier to calve". Fairfax NZ News. 23 February 2011.
  14. "5. - Glaciers and glaciation". Te Ara: The Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Retrieved 2016-09-14.
  15. "Environmental change and tourism at Aoraki/Mt Cook National Park". Lincoln University. p. 28-29. Retrieved 2016-09-14.
  16. "Environmental change and tourism at Aoraki/Mt Cook National Park". Lincoln University. p. 1. Retrieved 2016-09-14.
  17. "Environmental change and tourism at Aoraki/Mt Cook National Park". Lincoln University. p. 28. Retrieved 2016-09-14.
  18. Jeff Tollan (3 August 2010). "Tasman Glacier about to calve". Stuff.co.nz. The Timaru Herald. Retrieved 2016-09-14.
  19. "Tasman Glacier, Canterbury". NZ Topo Map. Land Information New Zealand. Retrieved 2016-09-14.

Further reading

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tasman Glacier.
The Aoraki/Mount Cook area from LandSat. The Tasman Glacier is just left of centre
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