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[MIS23-03] The Characteristic Water Level Changes Mechanism of Kinugasanoike Pond on the Northern Japanese Alps
Keywords:Kinugasanoike, alpine ponds, water level, water balance, Northern Japanese Alps
Kinugasanoike is completely iced and covered with 4m of snowpack in winter. The pond surface appears in mid-June every year when the snow melt is completed. The area of the catchment of the Kinugasanoike is 26724 m2, of which the area of the lake surface at steady water level is 258 m2. The snow-melting water is supplied from the surroundings to the Kinugasanoike, but snow-malting water accumulates on the ice because surface of the pond is still iced when early snow-melt season. On rainfall events, the pond level is sensitive to rainfall exceeding 2 mm per hour. This suggests that hourly precipitation exceeding 2 mm will cause surface runoff and raise the lake level even if there is no preceding rainfall. The Baiu and typhoon season brings a large amount of precipitation. The hourly rainfall of 20mm continues for 3 hours causes the water level of the pond rapidly rise more than 1m, but it take rapidly decreese return to the steady water level after the rainfall.