Capitulo de libro
First glacier inventory and recent glacier variations of Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego and adjacent islands in Southern Chile.
Fecha
2014Registro en:
978-3-540-79817-0
1080320
Institución
Resumen
The first glacier inventory of the islands south of the Estrecho de Magallanes including Isla
Grande de Tierra del Fuego, Isla Santa Inés and Isla Hoste, has been compiled using several
ASTER and Landsat ETM+ satellite images acquired between 2001 and 2011, yielding a total
area of 3289.5 km2 of glacier cover, distributed among 1681 glaciers. Previous estimations of
the total glaciated areas for these islands amounted to only 2500 km2, the difference being
attributed to more precise glacier delimitation, and not to glacier advances. Most of the glacier
tongues analyzed from recent remotely sensed imagery have been compared to historical data,
with a number of glaciers showing retreat in recent decades, especially on the northern side of
Cordillera Darwin and at Monte Sarmiento, both located on Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego.
Within the survey area of interest, Glaciar Marinelli showed the maximum change, with a
frontal retreat of 15 km between 1913 and 2011. Many other glacier fronts have been stable,
with only minor changes since the first historical accounts. Only two glaciers, located at the
southern edge of Cordillera Darwin, have shown advances in the last decade; namely Glaciar
Garibaldi (+1.1 km between 2001 and 2007), and an unnamed glacier calving into Bahía Pía
(+0.6 km between 1991 and 2004). These advancing glaciers seem to be responding to
calving oscillations, and not necessarily to a climatic trend in the region, that is currently
characterized by atmospheric warming and a reduction in precipitation.