Bedload component of glacially discharged sediment: Insights from the Matanuska Glacier, Alaska
- Justin T. Pearce*1,
- Frank J. Pazzaglia*1,
- Edward B. Evenson*1,
- Daniel E. Lawson*2,
- Richard B. Alley*3,
- Dru Germanoski*4 and
- Jon D. Denner*5
- 1Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania 18015, USA
- 2Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory, Fort Richardson, Alaska 99505, USA
- 3Department of Geosciences, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, USA
- 4Department of Geology and Environmental Geosciences, Lafayette College, Easton, Pennsylvania 18042, USA
- 5U.S. Geological Survey, Montpelier, Vermont 05601, USA
Abstract
The flux of glacially derived bedload and the proportions of the suspended and bedload components carried by proglacial streams are highly debated. Published data indicate a large range—from <30% to >75%—in the bedload percentage of the total load. Two “vents,” where supercooled subglacial meltwater and sediment are discharged, were sampled over the course of an entire melt season in order to quantify the flux of glacially delivered bedload at the Matanuska Glacier, Alaska. The bedload component contributed by these vents, for the one melt season monitored, is negligible. Furthermore, the bedload fluxes appear to be strongly supply limited, as shown by the poorly correlated discharge, bedload-flux magnitude, and grain-size caliber. Thus, in this case, any attempt to employ a predictive quantitative expression for coarse-sediment production based on discharge alone would be inaccurate. A nonglaciated basin proximal to the Matanuska Glacier terminus yielded higher bedload sediment fluxes and larger clast sizes than delivered by the two monitored vents. Such nonglaciated basins should not be overlooked as potentially major sources of coarse bedload that is reworked and incorporated into valley outwash.
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- Received 10 May 2002.
- Accepted 12 September 2002.
- Revision received 7 September 2002.
- Geological Society of America












