Evidence of climate change - Investigating glacial terminus and lake inventory using earth observation data for mountainous Bhutan

The mapping and monitoring of different types of Glacial lakes through the Geospatial techniques is vital to show the impact of climate changes on the Glacier and alleviate hazards that result from the bursting of Glacial Lakes and cause catastrophic consequences to human lives. The main goal of the...

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Published inScience of Remote Sensing Vol. 10; p. 100149
Main Authors Sajan, Bhartendu, Kanga, Shruti, Singh, Suraj Kumar, Rai, Praveen Kumar, Đurin, Bojan, Cetl, Vlado, Rathnayake, Upaka
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 01.12.2024
Elsevier
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Summary:The mapping and monitoring of different types of Glacial lakes through the Geospatial techniques is vital to show the impact of climate changes on the Glacier and alleviate hazards that result from the bursting of Glacial Lakes and cause catastrophic consequences to human lives. The main goal of the present work was to map and analyze different types of glacial lakes in Bhutan during the years 1990, 2000, and 2017. Several sets of satellite images, Landsat-TM for 1990, Landsat ETM + for 2000, and Landsat 8-OLI satellite image for 2017, were used to estimate the changes in the glacial lakes and the inventory study. Several glacial lakes, i.e., moraine-dammed lake, supra glacial lake, lateral moraine lake, erosional lake, medial moraine lake, and end moraine lake, were mapped within these periods. It was found that there was a rapid increase in glacial lakes from 1990 to 2017. The number of glacial lakes in 1990 was increased from 213 to 436 in 2017. It was also observed that the spatial dimensions of some of the glacial lakes increased. The study revealed five end moraine lakes, 40 lateral moraine lakes, 50 supra glacial lakes, 239 erosional lakes, and 15 other moraines dammed lakes in 2017.
ISSN:2666-0172
2666-0172
DOI:10.1016/j.srs.2024.100149