4.2 Article

Water tracks in the High Arctic: a hydrological network dominated by rapid subsurface flow through patterned ground

Journal

ARCTIC SCIENCE
Volume 3, Issue 2, Pages 334-353

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1139/as-2016-0014

Keywords

Patterned ground; permafrost hydrology; polar desert; sorted stripes; water tracks

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  2. Discovery Frontiers project Arctic Development and Adaptation to Permafrost in Transition (ADAPT)
  3. Networks of Centres of Excellence program ArcticNet
  4. Canada Research Chair program
  5. Northern Scientific Training Program
  6. Canadian Foundation for Innovation: Canadian Northern Studies Trust, Centre d'etudes nordiques (CEN)
  7. Fond de Recherche du Quebec-Nature et Technologie (FRQNT)

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Water tracks play a major role in the headwater basin hydrology of permafrost landscapes in Alaska and Antarctica, but less is known about these features in the High Arctic. We examined the physical and hydrological properties of water tracks on Ward Hunt Island, a polar desert site in the Canadian High Arctic, to evaluate their formation process and to compare with water tracks reported elsewhere. These High Arctic water tracks flowed through soils that possessed higher near-surface organic carbon concentrations, higher water content, and coarser material than the surrounding soils. The water track morphology suggested they were initiated by a combination of sorting, differential frost heaving, and eluviation. The resultant network of soil conduits, comparable to soil pipes, dominated the hydrology of the slope. The flow of cold water through these conduits slowed down the progression of the thawing front during summer, making the active layer consistently shallower relative to adjacent soils. Water tracks on Ward Hunt Island, and in polar desert catchments with these features elsewhere in the High Arctic, strongly influence slope hydrology and active-layer properties while also affecting vegetation distribution and the quality of runoff to the downstream lake.

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