The Juncal Norte Glacier (33°00′ S, 70°06′ W) is in the Dry Andes of central Chile within the Juncal Basin, a headwater watershed of the Aconcagua River, a semi-arid region experiencing an ongoing megadrought since 2010 and a 37% reduction in streamflow relative to pre-1990 baselines. This study provides the first glacier-specific annual melt and runoff estimate for Juncal Norte during mature megadrought conditions. Mass balance was estimated using a temperature index (positive degree day, PDD) model calibrated with automatic weather station (AWS) air temperature data and glacier hypsometry, assuming limited snow accumulation given that 2018–2019 precipitation and snow water equivalent (SWE) were extremely low relative to the long-term mean. Basin runoff was evaluated using a closure method comparing proglacial sub-basin-integrated discharge with modeled glacier melt volumes. Modeled glacier melt for 2018–2019 was equivalent to approximately 30% of observed annual discharge at the proglacial sub-basin, a disproportionate contribution given the glacier covers only 2.7% of the total basin area. The lower ablation zone (2900–4000 m), comprising 30% of glacier area, produced 90% of total melt volume. A + 1 °C temperature perturbation increased glacier-wide melt by 21.4%, confirming high climatic sensitivity. These results underscore the glacier’s critical but increasingly vulnerable buffering role for downstream water availability in the Dry Andes.
Bellisario et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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