Professor Mathews, outburst floods, and other glaciological disasters
- 1 June 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences
- Vol. 23 (6) , 859-868
- https://doi.org/10.1139/e86-088
Abstract
Misfortunes befalling the Granduc mining operation near Stewart, British Columbia, stimulated Professor Mathews' influential scientific contributions on subglacial hydrology. A series of violent floods from glacier-dammed Summit Lake menaced the transportation corridor between the Granduc ore concentrator and a tidewater dock at Hyder, Alaska. This unusual problem motivated the research of Mathews and later of Gilbert, who together laid the foundation for a greater understanding of the physics of outburst floods. The physical model that evolved from their research can be used to predict outburst flood magnitude and to cast light on the hydrology of ancient floods such as those from glacial Lake Missoula.This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Simulation of the August 1979 sudden discharge of glacier-dammed Flood Lake, British ColumbiaCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1984
- Estimates of the magnitude of glacier outburst floods from Lake Donjek, Yukon Territory, CanadaCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1981
- Thermal Effects of Crevassing on Steele Glacier, Yukon Territory, CanadaJournal of Glaciology, 1974
- The Magnitude of JökulhlaupsJournal of Glaciology, 1973
- Water Pressure in Intra- and Subglacial ChannelsJournal of Glaciology, 1972
- Movement of Water in GlaciersJournal of Glaciology, 1972
- Observations of the surge of Steele Glacier, Yukon Territory, CanadaCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1969
- Two Self-Dumping Ice-Dammed Lakes in British ColumbiaGeographical Review, 1965
- Water Pressure under a GlacierJournal of Glaciology, 1964
- The Mechanics of Glacier FlowJournal of Glaciology, 1952