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- Title
Hydro‐Mechanical Interactions of a Rock Slope With a Retreating Temperate Valley Glacier.
- Authors
Hugentobler, Marc; Aaron, Jordan; Loew, Simon; Roques, Clément
- Abstract
Rock slope failures often result from progressive rock mass damage which accumulates over long timescales. In deglaciating environments, rock slopes are affected by stress perturbations driven by mechanical unloading due to ice downwasting and concurrent changes in thermal and hydraulic boundary conditions. Since in‐situ data are rare, the different processes and their relative contribution to slope damage remain poorly understood. Here, we analyze borehole monitoring data from a rock slope adjacent to the retreating Great Aletsch Glacier (Switzerland) and compare it to englacial water levels, climate data, and decreasing ice levels. Rock slope pore pressures show a seasonal signal controlled by infiltration events as well as effects from the connectivity to the englacial hydrological system. We find that reversible and irreversible strains are driven by: (a) hydromechanical effects caused by englacial pressure fluctuations and infiltration events, (b) stress transfer related to changing mechanical glacial loads from short‐term englacial water level fluctuations and longer term ice downwasting, and (c) thermomechanical effects from annual temperature cycles penetrating the shallow subsurface, which primarily result in reversible deformation. We relate most observed irreversible strain (damage) to mechanical unloading from ice downwasting. Damage is strongest directly at the ice margin and moves through the slope at the pace of glacial retreat and advance. Locations with many retreat/advance cycles are very sensitive to landslide formation. The current climate warming impacts very sensitive valley sectors, which is confirmed by landslide distributions and activity in the study area. Plain Language Summary: The formation of rock slope instabilities is a long‐term process related to continuous rock mass weakening. For rock slopes in glaciated valleys, increased rates of rock mass damage are assumed to occur during ice retreat due to a reduction of the glacier weight and concurrent changes in rock temperatures and slope groundwater pressures. However, because direct field measurements are missing, governing processes and their relative importance are still poorly understood. Here, we analyze borehole monitoring data and compare it to englacial water levels, climate data, and decreasing ice levels. We find that the glacial hydrology influences the dynamics of the groundwater pressures in the adjacent rock slope at various timescales. We record micrometer‐scale reversible (elastic) deformation and irreversible rock mass damage and identify the involved drivers. Several processes contribute to progressive rock mass weakening at different timescales and magnitudes, but most damage is related to mechanical unloading from ice downwasting and is strongest directly at the ice margin. Locations with many retreat/advance cycles are sensitive to increased damage accumulation and landslide formation. The current climate warming impacts very sensitive valley sectors, which is confirmed by landslide distributions and activity in the study area. Key Points: We monitored subsurface pore pressures and micrometer scale strain in a rock slope during strong glacial retreat caused by climate warmingWe identified thermo‐hydro‐mechanical drivers for reversible deformation and irreversible rock mass damage acting at various timescalesSlope damage intensity can be related to landslide spatial and temporal distribution
- Subjects
ROCK slopes; GLACIERS; LANDSLIDES; GROUNDWATER temperature; POWER transmission; WATER levels; ROCK deformation
- Publication
Journal of Geophysical Research. Earth Surface, 2022, Vol 127, Issue 4, p1
- ISSN
2169-9003
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1029/2021JF006484