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Context: Recently, the Flash floods occurred in Sikkim after the South Lhonak Lake, a glacier lake located in the northwest region of the state, burst due to incessant rains.
Glacial lakes are large bodies of water that sit in front of, on top of, or beneath a melting glacier.
As they grow larger, they become more dangerous because glacial lakes are mostly dammed by unstable ice or sediment composed of loose rock and debris.
When the boundary around unstable glacial lake breaks, and huge amounts of water rush down the side of the mountains, which could cause flooding in the downstream areas.
This is called glacial lake outburst floods or GLOF.
GLOF can be triggered by several reasons, including earthquakes, extremely heavy rains and ice avalanches.
These lakes are also often found in steep, mountainous regions, which means landslides or ice avalanches can sometimes fall directly into the lakes and displace the water, causing it to over-top the natural dam and flood downstream.
They involve sudden (and sometimes cyclic) releases of water.
They tend to be rapid events, lasting hours to days.
They result in large downstream river discharges (which often increase by an order of magnitude).
In 2013, one such event took place in Uttarakhand’s Kedarnath when the region witnessed flash floods along with a GLOF caused by the Chorabari Tal glacial lake.
With the rising global temperatures, glaciers in Sikkim Himalayan have been melting rapidly, giving rise to many glacier lakes and expanding the already existing ones in the region.
There are currently more than 300 glacial lakes in Sikkim Himalayan, according to the Sikkim State Disaster Management Authority.
Out of these, 10 have been identified as vulnerable to outburst floods.
The NDMA released guidelines on how to deal with disasters caused by GLOFs. According to the guidelines, risk reduction begins with the identification and mapping of glacial lakes.
Taking structural measures to avoid their breach and establishing robust mechanisms to save life and property in the event of a breach.
Using Synthetic-Aperture Radar imagery to automatically detect changes in water bodies, including new lake formations, during the monsoon months.
It also suggested that methods could be developed to permit remote monitoring of lakes from space.
To manage lakes structurally, the NDMA recommends decreasing the volume of water with methods like controlled breaching, pumping or siphoning out water, and making a tunnel through the moraine barrier or under an ice dam.
South Lhonak Lake is a glacial-moraine-dammed lake, located in Sikkim's far northwestern region.
The lake is located at 5,200 m (17,100 ft) above sea level.
It formed due to the melting of the Lhonak glacier.
It is one of the fastest expanding lakes in the Sikkim Himalaya region, and one of the 14 potentially dangerous lakes susceptible to glacial lake outburst flood.
East district is a part of the Eastern Himalayas Five geological units encountered in the district are Kanchenjunga gneiss, Darjeeling gneiss, Chungthang schists and gneiss, lingtse granite gneiss and the daling group of rocks.
In the East District out of the total geographic area (964 sq km) , 679 sq km of area is covered by forest which is 71.17% of the total geographic area.
The major drainage systems in the East district are Teesta, Rangpo Chhu, and Dik Chhu.
The Teesta basin in Sikkim Himalaya hosts numerous glacial lakes in the high-altitude glacierised region, including one of the largest and fastest-growing South Lhonak Lake.
Sikkim has 733 glacial lakes, with 288 located above an altitude of 5,000 m, according to the National Remote Sensing Centre (NRSC).
A study by an international team of researchers had warned two year ago that the South Lhonak lake in Sikkim may burst in the future and significantly impact the downstream region.
The 2021 study, published in the journal Geomorphology, highlighted that South Lhonak Lake had witnessed a significant growth in the past decades due to glacial retreat, thereby increasing its chances of glacial lake outburst floods (GLOF).
By: Shubham Tiwari ProfileResourcesReport error
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