Popis: |
Mountain depositional landforms are important units for freshwater supply in regions with water deficits and significant droughts during the summer season. In the Northern Patagonian Andes, the cold climatic events during the Pleistocene period left a large number of glacial and periglacial depositional landforms, among which a glacial cirque called La Hoya stands out. An analysis of geomorphological landforms, climatic data, soil temperature, flows in springs and streams, electrical conductivity measurements, and stable isotope determination of water, were made to study the hydrological role of these depositional mountain landforms. In this region, precipitations are concentrate during the winter season when an important snow cover accumulates and persists until spring. During winter and spring seasons, part of the snowmelt infiltrates, being kept in solid states inside the depositional landforms, and part of it contributes to the runoff between winter and summer. At the ends of spring and early summer, the snowmelt is the main water contribution to the La Hoya watershed. During late summer and autumn, the most important water contribution is from groundwater discharge. Where glacial ice is absent and the presence of permafrost is limited or non-existent, morphosedimentary units are important landforms for water storage and streams sustenance. This is the case of the city of Esquel, which depends exclusively on the "Los Bandidos" stream for water supply, which is sustained throughout the year by these landforms. The increase in temperature and the decrease in precipitation in this region highlights the importance of the high-altitude depositional landforms for the capture, storage, and distribution of water resources in the Northern Patagonian Andes. |