4.6 Article

Spatial distribution of thermokarst terrain in Arctic Alaska

期刊

GEOMORPHOLOGY
卷 273, 期 -, 页码 116-133

出版社

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2016.08.007

关键词

Thermokarst; Thaw; Arctic; Landform mapping

资金

  1. Arctic Landscape Conservation Cooperative
  2. USGS Alaska Climate Science Center-funded Alaska Integrated Ecosystem Model Project
  3. ERC [338335]
  4. NSF [ARC-0902169, PLR 1417611]
  5. USGS Land Change Science Program
  6. Land Remote Sensing Program
  7. Bureau of Land Management
  8. National Science Foundation (NSF-PLR) [1417611]
  9. Office of Polar Programs (OPP)
  10. Directorate For Geosciences [1417611] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

In landscapes underlain by ice-rich permafrost, the development of thermokarst landforms can have drastic impacts on ecosystem processes and human infrastructure. Here we describe the distribution of thermokarst land forms in the continuous permafrost zone of Arctic Alaska, analyze linkages to the underlying surficial geology, and discuss the vulnerability of different types of landscapes to future thaw. We identified nine major thermokarst landforms and then mapped their distributions in twelve representative study areas totaling 300-km(2). These study areas differ in their geologic history, permafrost-ice content, and ground thermal regime. Results show that 63% of the entire study area is occupied by thermokarst landforms and that the distribution of thermokarst landforms and overall landscape complexity varies markedly with surficial geology. Areas underlain by ice-rich marine silt are the most affected by thermokarst (97% of total area), whereas areas underlain by glacial drift are least affected (14%). Drained thermokarst-lake basins are the most widespread thermokarst landforms, covering 33% of the entire study region, with greater prevalence in areas of marine silt (48% coverage), marine sand (47%), and aeolian silt (34%). Thermokarst-lakes are the second most common thermokarst landform, covering 16% of the study region, with highest coverage in areas underlain by marine silt (39% coverage). Thermokarst troughs and pits cover 7% of the study region and are the third most prevalent thermokarst land form. They are most common in areas underlain by deltaic sands and gravels (18% coverage) and marine sand (12%). Alas valleys are widespread in areas of aeolian silt (14%)located in gradually sloping uplands. Areas of marine silt have been particularly vulnerable to thaw in the past because they are ice-rich and have low-gradient topography facilitating the repeated development of thermokarst-lakes. In the future, ice-rich aeolian, upland terrain (yedoma) will be particularly susceptible to thaw because it still contains massive concentrations of ground ice in the form of syngenetic ice-wedges that have remained largely intact since the Pleistocene. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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