Published 2012
Journal article Open

Glacial lake mapping with very high resolution satellite SAR data

Description

Floods resulting from the outbursts of glacial lakes are among the most far-reaching disasters in high mountain regions. Glacial lakes are typically located in remote areas and space-borne remote sensing data are an important source of information about the occurrence and development of such lakes. Here we show that very high resolution satellite Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) data can be employed for reliably mapping glacial lakes. Results in the Alps, Pamir and Himalaya using TerraSAR-X and Radarsat-2 data are discussed in comparison to in-situ information, and high-resolution satellite optical and radar imagery. The performance of the satellite SAR data is best during the snow- and ice-free season. In the broader perspective of hazard management, the detection of glacial lakes and the monitoring of their changes from very high-resolution satellite SAR intensity images contributes to the initial assessment of hazards related to glacial lakes, but a more integrated, multi-level approach needs also to include other relevant information such as glacier outlines and outline changes or the identification of unstable slopes above the lake and the surrounding area, information types to which SAR analysis techniques can also contribute.

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Additional details

Publishing information

Title
Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences
Volume
12
Issue
8
Pages
2487-2498

ICIMOD publication type

ICIMOD publication type
Staff contributions

Others

Special note
ICIMOD Stafff, Sarad Joshi, peerreviewed PR

URL

Legacy Data

Legacy numeric recid
27134