The glaciers of equatorial East Africa

Bibliographic Information

The glaciers of equatorial East Africa

Stefan Hastenrath

(Solid earth sciences library)

D. Reidel , Sold and distributed in the U.S.A. and Canada by Kluwer Academic Publishers, c1984

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Note

Eleven folded maps in pocket

Bibliography: p. 328-342

Includes indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In the course of a decade's work on the mountains of East Africa, I met some of the most wonderful people on Earth. It is impossible to record all those who have helped me in this study in one way or other. Glacier research in East Africa has some history. Nearly half a century ago, Carl Troll completed the first detailed mapping of Lewis Glacier. I had the good fortune of exchanging ideas with him at his home in Bonn in 1974, shortly before his death. Paul C. Spink, Ulceby, North lincolnshire, England, shared with me his photographs and observations on Kilimanjaro and Mount Kenya in the 1940s. When I joined the University of Nairobi in 1973, several members of the 1957-58 IGY Mc)Unt Kenya :Expedition were still there. I received generous advice and help from Igor Loupekine, John Loxton, but especially from Robert A. Caukwell and Frank Charnley. Their continuous coopera- tion was a great encouragement over the years. Heinz Loeffler, University of Vienna, informed me about the depth of Lewis Tarn. Helmut Heuberger, University of Munich, provided me data on his measurements of glacier terminus positions. Peter Gollmer of Geosurveys and Alan Root, Nairobi, gave me aerial photographs of Kibo f~om the early 1970s. I acknowledge support from various other colleagues at the University of Nairobi: Raouf Rostom of the Department of Surveying and Photogrammetry; Neville Skinner of the Department of Physics; G. C. Asnani, John Ng'anga, J. K.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction.- 2. The Environmental Setting.- 2.1. Physiographic Structure.- 2.2. Atmospheric Circulation and Climate.- 2.3. Vegetation.- 2.4. Subnival Soil Forms.- 2.4.1. Nomenclature.- 2.4.2. Mountains of East Africa.- 2.4.3. Ethiopia.- 2.4.4. Southern Africa.- 2.4.5. Fossil forms.- 2.4.6. Synthesis.- 2.5. Lake Level Variations.- 3. Pleistocene and Early Holocene Glaciations.- 3.1. Kilimanjaro.- 3.2. Ruwenzori.- 3.3. Mount Kenya.- 3.4. Aberdares.- 3.5. Mount Elgon.- 3.6. Ethiopia.- 3.7. The Saharan Uplands.- 3.8. Southern Africa.- 3.9. Synthesis.- 4. The Recent Glaciation.- 4.1. Kilimanjaro.- 4.2. Ruwenzori.- 4.3. Mount Kenya.- 4.4. Glaciological Studies.- 4.5. Synthesis.- 5. Lewis Glacier, Mount Kenya.- 5.1. Design of the Field Program.- 5.1.1. Ice surface topography.- 5.1.2. Bedrock topography and ice thickness.- 5.1.3. Ice surface velocity.- 5.1.4. Net balance.- 5.1.5. Precipitation measurements.- 5.1.6. Water runoff.- 5.1.7. Surface heat budget.- 5.1.8. Stratigraphy.- 5.2. Morphology.- 5.2.1. Environment and geology.- 5.2.2. Seismic method.- 5.2.2.1. Instrumentation.- 5.2.2.2. Theory.- 5.2.2.3. Observation program.- 5.2.2.4. Evaluation.- 5.2.3. Gravimetry.- 5.2.3.1. Instrumentation.- 5.2.3.2. Theory.- 5.2.3.3. Observation program.- 5.2.3.4. Evaluation.- 5.2.4. Ice dynamics.- 5.2.4.1. Theory.- 5.2.5. Synthesis of techniques.- 5.2.6. Bottom topography and ice volume.- 5.2.7. Long-term variations of ice extent and volume.- 5.3. Kinematics.- 5.3.1. Observations.- 5.3.2. Velocity and mass flux pattern.- 5.3.3. Crevasse pattern.- 5.3.4. Long-term variations of velocity.- 5.4. Mass and Heat Budget.- 5.4.1. Basic theory.- 5.4.2. Precipitation.- 5.4.3. Net balance.- 5.4.4. Water runoff.- 5.4.5. Global radiation.- 5.4.6. Albedo.- 5.4.7. Net longwave radiation.- 5.4.8. Net allwave radiation.- 5.4.9. Sensible heat flux and storage.- 5.4.10. Melting and sublimation.- 5.4.11. Closure of annual budgets.- 5.4.12. Diurnal forcing-response relationships.- 5.5. Ice Stratigraphy and Cores.- 5.6. Long-Term Climatic Forcing and Glacier Response.- 6. East African Glaciers and the Global Tropics.- 6.1. Pleistocene and Early Holocene Variations.- 6.2. The Recent Glaciation.- 6.3. Spatial Patterns of Ice Equilibrium Elevation.- 6.4. Lewis Glacier.- 6.5. Glacier-Climate Relationships.- 6.6. Recommendations.- Summary.- Abstract.- of Chapters.- APPENDIX 1 : List of Topographic Maps, Air Photographs, and Satellite Imagery.- APPENDIX 2 : List of Historical Photographs and Drawings.- APPENDIX 3: Data Supplied to World Glacier Inventory.- Author Index.

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Details

  • NCID
    BA10542116
  • ISBN
    • 9027715726
  • LCCN
    83021144
  • Country Code
    ne
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Dordrecht [Netherlands] ; Boston,Hingham, MA, U.S.A.
  • Pages/Volumes
    xxiv, 353 p.
  • Size
    25 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
  • Parent Bibliography ID
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