Geosciences (Mar 2023)

Quantitative Long-Term Monitoring (1890–2020) of Morphodynamic and Land-Cover Changes of a LIA Lateral Moraine Section

  • Moritz Altmann,
  • Katharina Ramskogler,
  • Sebastian Mikolka-Flöry,
  • Madlene Pfeiffer,
  • Florian Haas,
  • Tobias Heckmann,
  • Jakob Rom,
  • Fabian Fleischer,
  • Toni Himmelstoß,
  • Norbert Pfeifer,
  • Camillo Ressl,
  • Erich Tasser,
  • Michael Becht

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences13040095
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 4
p. 95

Abstract

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Aerial photographs of the European Alps usually only reach back to the middle of the 20th century, which limits the time span of corresponding studies that quantitatively analyse long-term surface changes of proglacial areas using georeferenced orthophotos. To the end of the Little Ice Age, this leads to a gap of about 100 years. Using digital monoplotting and several historical terrestrial photographs, we show the quantification of surface changes of a Little Ice Age lateral moraine section until the late second half of the 19th century, reaching a total study period of 130 years (1890–2020). The (initial) gully system expands (almost) continuously over the entire study period from 1890 to 2020. Until 1953, the vegetation-covered areas also expanded (mainly scree communities, alpine grasslands and dwarf shrub communities), before decreasing again, especially between 1990 and 2003, due to large-scale erosion within the gully system. Furthermore, our results show that the land-cover development was impacted by temperature and precipitation changes. With the 130-year study period, we contribute to a substantial improvement in the understanding of the processes in the proglacial by analysing the early phase and thus the immediate response of the lateral moraine to the ice exposure.

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