Glacial Outburst Flood
- Glacial lake outburst floods (GLOFs) occur from an unstable natural dam formed from a glacial retreat.
- Glaciers are large bodies of ice moving slowly. So, when a glacier retreats, it leaves behind a large impression in the ground, filling it with water and a lake is formed.
- This is known as a moraine, which can be impounded by precarious pile of debris and buried ice
- The moraine dammed lakes weaken as the water level rises and the glacier retreats
- They might crumble under pressure from the swelling lake, leading to massive floods
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- Glacial lakes may vary in volume but may hold millions to hundreds of millions of cubic metre of water, say experts.
- The outburst of water can also happen due to erosion, an avalanche of snow or rock, an earthquake or volcanic eruptions under the ice.
- A moraine-dammed lake forms as a glacier retreats, and meltwater fills the space between the proglacial moraine (in front of the glacier) and the retreating glacier
- In the Hindu Kush Himalaya, moraine-dammed glacial lakes are common and numerous GLOF events have been traced back to the failure of moraine dams


