This paper reports work exploring the potential for using the natural fallout radionuclide 210Pbex to date moraine soils for tracing glacier retreat. Based on the physical processes of 210Pbex deposition,… Click to show full abstract
This paper reports work exploring the potential for using the natural fallout radionuclide 210Pbex to date moraine soils for tracing glacier retreat. Based on the physical processes of 210Pbex deposition, decay and losses due to runoff, a210Pbex accumulation-decay model (An=I[1-λn+11-λ-b(cn+1-λn+1)c-λ] ) was developed, where An = 210Pbex inventory (Bq·m-2); I = annual inventory of 210Pbex deposition (Bq·m-2); λ = 210 Pb decay coefficient (0.969); n = time span (years); b and c = 210Pbex loss coefficients for the runoff pathway. Furthermore, 137Cs was used to identify the ages of the study sites and to support the 210Pbex model results. The model was validated with data obtained from the Hailuogou Glacier Valley, Mt. Gongga, in 2016, where nine glacier retreat moraine points were recorded from 1910 to 1990 along a retreat length of 1750 m in the valley. 210Pbex inventories increased from 3,669.6 ± 218.5 Bq·m-2 at the site where the glacier retreated in 1990 to 10,718.9 ± 167.4 Bq·m-2 in 1910. The coefficients of b = 0.6006 and c = 0.9764 were derived from the 210Pbex inventories at the nine sites with recorded glacier retreat times that were marked with special stone and terrain features. The goodness-of-fit (GOF) for the model predictions of glacier retreat times is 65.5%. The results obtained confirm that the fallout radionuclide 210Pbex has potential for dating moraine soils in other cryosphere regions throughout the world as well as for other types of records forming sedimentary landform sequences such as soils on debris flows and alluvial fans.
               
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