Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Martin Hoelzle is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Martin Hoelzle.


Annals of Glaciology | 1995

Application of inventory data for estimating characteristics of and regional climate-change effects on mountain glaciers: a pilot study with the European Alps

Wilfried Haeberli; Martin Hoelzle

A parameterization scheme using simple algorithms for unmeasured glaciers is being applied to glacier inventory data to estimate the basic glaciological characteristics of the inventoried ice bodies and simulate potential climate-change effects on mountain glaciers. For past and potential climate scenarios, glacier changes for assumed mass-balance changes are calculated as step functions between steady-state conditions for time intervals that approximately correspond to the characteristic dynamic response time (a few decades) of the glaciers. In order to test the procedure, a pilot study was carried out in the European Alps where detailed glacier inventories had been compiled around the mid-1970s. Total glacier volume in the Alps is estimated at about 130 km3 for the mid-1970s; strongly negative mass balances are likely to have caused a loss of about 10–20% of this total volume during the decade 1980–90. Backward calculation of glacier-length changes using a mean annual mass balance of 0.25m w.e.a−1 since the end of the “Little Ice Age” around 1850 AD gives considerable scatter but satisfactory overall results as compared with long-term observations. The total loss of Alpine surface ice mass since 1850 can be estimated at about half the original value. An acceleration of this development, with annual mass losses of around 1 m a−1 or more as anticipated from IPCC scenario A for the coming century, could eliminate major parts of the presently existing Alpine ice volume within decades.


Annals of Glaciology | 2002

The new remote sensing derived Swiss glacier inventory: II. First results.

Andreas Kääb; Frank Paul; Max Maisch; Martin Hoelzle; Wilfried Haeberli

Abstract A new Swiss glacier inventory is to be compiled from satellite data for the year 2000. The study presented here describes two major tasks: an accuracy assessment of different methods for glacier classification with Landsat Thematic Mapper (TM) data and a digital elevation model (DEM); the geographical information system (GIS)-based methods for automatic extraction of individual glaciers from classified satellite data and the computation of three-dimensional glacier parameters (such as minimum, maximum and median elevation or slope and orientation) by fusion with a DEM. First results obtained by these methods are presented in Part II of this paper (Kääb and others, 2002). Thresholding of a ratio image from TM4 and TM5 reveals the best-suited glacier map. The computation of glacier parameters in a GIS environment is efficient and suitable for worldwide application. The methods developed contribute to the U. S. Geological Survey-led Global Land Ice Measurements from Space (GLIMS) project which is currently compiling a global inventory of land ice masses within the framework of global glacier monitoring (Haeberli and others, 2000).


Annals of Glaciology | 2009

Six decades of glacier mass-balance observations: a review of the worldwide monitoring network

Michael Zemp; Martin Hoelzle; Wilfried Haeberli

Abstract Glacier mass balance is the direct and undelayed response to atmospheric conditions and hence is among the essential variables required for climate system monitoring. It has been recognized as the largest non-steric contributor to the present rise in sea level. Six decades of annual mass-balance data have been compiled and made easily available by the World Glacier Monitoring Service and its predecessor organizations. In total, there have been 3480 annual mass-balance measurements reported from 228 glaciers around the globe. However, the present dataset is strongly biased towards the Northern Hemisphere and Europe and there are only 30 ‘reference’ glaciers that have uninterrupted series going back to 1976. The available data from the six decades indicate a strong ice loss as early as the 1940s and 1950s followed by a moderate mass loss until the end of the 1970s and a subsequent acceleration that has lasted until now, culminating in a mean overall ice loss of over 20mw.e. for the period 1946–2006. In view of the discrepancy between the relevance of glacier mass-balance data and the shortcomings of the available dataset it is strongly recommended to: (1) continue the long-term measurements; (2) resume interrupted long-term data series; (3) replace vanishing glaciers by early-starting replacement observations; (4) extend the monitoring network to strategically important regions; (5) validate, calibrate and accordingly flag field measurements with geodetic methods; and (6) make systematic use of remote sensing and geo-informatics for assessment of the representativeness of the available data series for their entire mountain range and for the extrapolation to regions without in situ observations; and (7) make all these data and related meta-information available.


Annals of Glaciology | 2007

Integrated monitoring of mountain glaciers as key indicators of global climate change: the European Alps

Wilfried Haeberli; Martin Hoelzle; Frank Paul; Michael Zemp

Abstract The internationally recommended multi-level strategy for monitoring mountain glaciers is illustrated using the example of the European Alps, where especially dense information has been available through historical times. This strategy combines in situ measurements (mass balance, length change) with remote sensing (inventories) and numerical modelling. It helps to bridge the gap between detailed local process-oriented studies and global coverage. Since the 1980s, mass balances have become increasingly negative, with values close to –1mw.e. a–1 during the first 5 years of the 21st century. The hot, dry summer of 2003 alone caused a record mean loss of 2.45 mw.e., roughly 50% above the previous record loss in 1998, more than three times the average between 1980 and 2000 and an order of magnitude more than characteristic long-term averages since the end of the Little Ice Age and other extended periods of glacier shrinkage during the past 2000 years. It can be estimated that glaciers in the European Alps lost about half their total volume (roughly 0.5% a–1) between 1850 and around 1975, another 25% (or 1%a–1) of the remaining amount between 1975 and 2000, and an additional 10–15% (or 2–3% a–1) in the first 5 years of this century.


Global and Planetary Change | 2003

Secular glacier mass balances derived from cumulative glacier length changes

Martin Hoelzle; Wilfred Haeberli; M Dischl; W Peschke

Glacier mass changes are considered to represent natural key variables with respect to strategies for early detection of enhanced greenhouse effects on climate. The main problem, however, with interpreting worldwide glacier mass balance evolution concerns the question of representativity. One important key to deal with such uncertainties and to assess the spatiotemporal representativity of the few available measurements is the long-term change in cumulative glacier length. The mean specific mass balance determined from glacier length change data since 1900 shows considerable regional variability but centers around a mean value of about � 0.25 m year � 1 water equivalent. D 2003 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2006

Strong spatial variability of snow accumulation observed with helicopter-borne GPR on two adjacent Alpine glaciers

Horst Machguth; Olaf Eisen; F Paul; Martin Hoelzle

The spatial distribution of snow accumulation plays an essential role for the mass balancedistribution on alpine glaciers. Traditional point measurements (snow pits and-probes) are labour intensive and interpolation in-between the points causes uncertainties.Airborne radar measurements have already been used for snow mapping innon-glacierized terrain, but not on Alpine glaciers. To enhance our understanding ofthe spatial distribution of accumulation and pin down reasons for observed variations,we have conducted high-resolution helicopter-borne radar measurements on the temperatedglacier Findel and neighbouring Adler Glacier in southwestern Switzerland.The radar sensor was mounted underneath a helicopter and operated at a centre frequencyof 500 MHz with a bandwidth of 400 MHz. The results were validated withextensive ground-based profiling of the snow cover. The radar data allows a clearrecognition of the snow cover (6% of the total profile length of 10 km did not allowinterpretation due to missing or disturbed layering) and agreed well with the groundbased measurements (R2 = 0.85). Reduced accumulation has been observed in allcrevassed zones. Statistical analysis of the correlation between observed accumulationand terrain characteristics have been performed in a GIS environment, revealing differingaccumulation patterns: On the lower part of Findel Glacier accumulation showsa clear altitudinal trend, while the upper part is dominated by strongly varying snowdepth without an altitudinal trend. The accumulation characteristic on Adler Glacieris similar to the upper part of Findel Glacier, but despite of their close vicinity, accumulationis reduced by 40% compared to the same elevation on Findel Glacier. Thisstudy reveals a large potential of helicopter-borne snow profiling for measurements ofaccumulation distribution on alpine glaciers.


Geografiska Annaler Series A-physical Geography | 1999

On Rates and Acceleration Trends of Global Glacier Mass Changes

Wilfried Haeberli; Regula Frauenfelder; Martin Hoelzle; Max Maisch

Worldwide glacier mass changes are considered to represent natural key variables within global climate-related monitoring programmes, especially with respect to strategies concerning early detection of enhanced greenhouse effects on climate. This is due to the fact that glacier mass changes provide important quantitative information on rates of change, acceleration tendencies and pre-industrial variability relating to energy exchange at the earth/athmosphere interface. During the coming decades, excess radiation income and sensible heat (a few watts per square metre) as calculated with numerical climate models are both estimated to increase by a factor of about two to four as compared to the mean of the 20th century. The rate of average annual mass loss (a few decimetres per year) measured today on mountain glaciers in various parts of the world now appears to accelerate accordingly, even though detailed interpretation of the complex processes involved remains difficult. Within the framework of secular glacier retreat and Holocene glacier fluctuations, similar rates of change and acceleration must have taken place before, i.e. during times of weak anthropogenic forcing. However, the anthropogenic influences on the atmosphere could now and for the first time represent a major contributing factor to the observed glacier shrinkage at a global scale. Problems with such assessments mainly concern aspects of statistical averaging, regional climate variability, strong differences in glacier sensitivity and relations between mass balance and cumulative glacier length change over decadal to secular time scales. Considerable progress has recently been achieved in these fields of research.


Annals of Glaciology | 2006

Distributed glacier mass-balance modelling as an important component of modern multi-level glacier monitoring

Horst Machguth; Frank Paul; Martin Hoelzle; Wilfried Haeberli

Abstract Modern concepts of worldwide glacier monitoring include numerical models for (1) interconnecting the different levels of observations (local mass balance, representative length change, glacier inventories for global coverage) and (2) extrapolations in space (coupling with climate models) and time (backward and forward). In this context, one important new tool is distributed mass-balance modelling in complex mountain topography. This approach builds on simplified energy-balance models and can be applied for investigating the spatio-temporal representativity of the few mass-balance measurements, for estimating balance values at the tongue of unmeasured glaciers in order to derive long-term average balance values from a great number of glaciers with known length change, and for assessing special effects such as the influence of Sahara dust falls on the albedo and mass balance or autocorrelation effects due to surface darkening of glaciers with strongly negative balances. Experience from first model runs in the Swiss Alps and from applications to the extreme conditions in summer 2003 provides evidence about the usefulness of this approach for glacier monitoring and analysis of glacier changes in high-mountain regions. The main difficulties concern the spatial variability of the input parameters (e.g. precipitation, snow cover and surface albedo) and the uncertainties in the parameterizations of the components of the energy balance. Field measurements remain essential to tie the models to real ground conditions.


Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union | 2000

New eyes in the sky measure glaciers and ice sheets

Hugh H. Kieffer; Jeffrey S. Kargel; Roger G. Barry; Robert Bindschadler; Michael P. Bishop; David J. MacKinnon; Atsumu Ohmura; Bruce H. Raup; Massimo Antoninetti; Jonathan L. Bamber; Mattias Braun; Ian A. Brown; Denis Cohen; Luke Copland; Jon DueHagen; Rune V. Engeset; B. B. Fitzharris; Koji Fujita; Wilfried Haeberli; Jon Oue Hagen; Dorothy K. Hall; Martin Hoelzle; Maria Johansson; Andi Kaab; Max Koenig; Vladimir Konovalov; Max Maisch; Frank Paul; Frank Rau; Niels Reeh

The mapping and measurement of glaciers and their changes are useful in predicting sea-level and regional water supply, studying hazards and climate change [Haeberli et al., 1998],and in the hydropower industry Existing inventories cover only about 67,000 of the worlds estimated 160,000 glaciers and are based on data collected over 50 years or more [e.g.,Haeberli et al., 1998]. The data available have proven that small ice bodies are disappearing at an accelerating rate and that the Antarctic ice sheet and its fringing ice shelves are undergoing unexpected, rapid change. According to many glaciologists, much larger fluctuations in land ice—with vast implications for society—are possible in the coming decades and centuries due to natural and anthropogenic climate change [Oppenheimer, 1998].


Norsk Geografisk Tidsskrift-norwegian Journal of Geography | 2001

Using relict rockglaciers in GIS-based modelling to reconstruct Younger Dryas permafrost distribution patterns in the Err-Julier area, Swiss Alp

Regula Frauenfelder; Wilfried Haeberli; Martin Hoelzle; Max Maisch

Differences in mean annual air temperature between the Younger Dryas period and today were estimated at the fronts of 32 relict rockglaciers in the Err-Julier area, eastern Swiss Alps. The analyses were based on a case-by-case calculation of direct incoming solar radiation and mean annual air temperature using a digital elevation model (DEM) and meteo data of recent years. Our results suggest that mean annual air temperature during the Younger Dryas was lowered by c. 3C to 4C, and that the lower limit of permafrost occurrence was depressed considerably more than glacier equilibrium lines. This indicates strongly reduced precipitation (30% to 40% reduction) and much larger abundance of mountain permafrost at that time. A model simulation of the corresponding spatial permafrost distribution during the Younger Dryas indicates that glaciers in the study area were mostly surrounded by permafrost at that time and probably had a polythermal structure of englacial temperatures.

Collaboration


Dive into the Martin Hoelzle's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Regula Frauenfelder

Norwegian Geotechnical Institute

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge