4.7 Article

Active layer thermal monitoring of a Dry Valley of the Ellsworth Mountains, Continental Antarctica

Journal

CATENA
Volume 149, Issue -, Pages 603-615

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.catena.2016.07.020

Keywords

Active layer; Dry Valley; Ellsworth Mountains; Continental Antarctica

Funding

  1. CAPES
  2. CNPq (MCTI/CNPq/FNDCT - Acao Transversal) [64/2013]

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The Ellsworth Mountains are located along the southern edge of the Ronne-Filchner Ice Shelf and are subdivided by the Minnesota Glacier into the Heritage Range to the east, and the Sentinel Range to the west (Figure 1). The climate of the Ellsworth Mountains is strongly controlled by proximity to the Ronne-Filchner Ice Shelf and elevation. The entire ice free area is underlain by continuous permafrost of unknown thickness, most in the form of dry permafrost. Active-layer depths in drift sheets of the Ellsworth Mountains range from 15 to 50 cm. Detailed knowledge on Antarctic permafrost is patchy, especially at the continent. Two adjacent active layer monitoring sites were installed at Mt. Dolence, Ellsworth Mountains, in the summer of 2012. Two dry-valley soils at Mt. Dolence area, on quartzite drift deposits were studied: (i) a convex-slope site exposed to the wind (Lithic Haplorthel 886 m asl, 5 cm, 10 cm, 30 cm); and a sheltered concave-slope site protected from winds (Lithic Anhyorthel 850 m asl, 5 cm, 10 cm, 30 cm). Data was recorded at hourly intervals from January 2nd 2012 until December 29th 2013. The soil climate temperature at 5 cm reaches a maximum daily mean in late December, reaching a minimum in mid July at both sites. Active layer thickness reaches a maximum of 48.4 cm at P1 on January 17th 2013 and 47.8 cm at P2 on January 7th 2012. The soil thermal regime at the dry valley of Mt. Dolence, Ellsworth Mountains is characteristic of cold desert affected by dry-frozen permafrost. Although air temperature does not reach elevated positive values, variations in soil temperature are intense, showing the soil's response to solar radiation. The origins of typical surface periglacial features and landform on the widespread Ellsworth drifts may be inherited from past events of warmer climates, since liquid water is unlikely to play any significant role under the present climate. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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