Degrading ice wedges reshape Arctic landscape
14
March, 2016
Ice
wedges, a common subsurface feature in permafrost landscapes, appear
to be rapidly melting throughout the Arctic, according to a new study
published today in the journal Nature Geoscience.
The
wedges, which can be the size of a house, gradually formed over
hundreds or even thousands of years as water seeped into
permafrost cracks. On the ground surface, they form polygon shapes
roughly 15-30 meters wide — a defining characteristic of
northern landscapes.
George Burba
photo
Subsurface ice wedges often form polygon shapes in the Arctic landscape. A new study determines that the wedges are rapidly degrading, which could significantly affect the topography of many permafrost-rich areas.
The
micro-topographic features of ice wedge polygons affect drainage,
snow distribution and the general wetness or dryness of a landscape.
Anna
Liljedahl, an assistant professor at the University of Alaska
Fairbanks’ Water and Environmental Research Center, and her
co-authors gathered information about the types of ice-wedge polygons
and how they changed over time across the Arctic. They collected the
information while performing various other permafrost studies.
Although
these regions contain “cold permafrost,” with an overall average
temperature of about 7 degrees Fahrenheit, surface thawing still
occurred at all of the 10 study sites.
Ice
wedge degradation has been observed before in individual locations,
but this is the first study to determine that rapid melting has
become widespread throughout the Arctic.
“Here
we’re combining observations from people working in the field
across the Arctic — Russia, Canada and Alaska — where we’re
seeing the same ice wedge melting phenomenon,” said Liljedahl, the
lead author of the study.
Such
thawing could bring significant changes to the hydrology of much of
the Arctic as it alters the ground-surface topography. Melting of ice
wedge tops makes the ground that surrounds the polygons subside,
which in turn allows drainage of ice-wedge polygon centers. This can
create a connective drainage system that encourages runoff and
therefore an overall drying of the landscape.
“It’s
really the tipping point for the hydrology,” Liljedahl said.
“Suddenly you’re draining the landscape and creating more runoff,
even if the amount of precipitation remains the same. Instead of
being absorbed by the tundra, the snowmelt water will run off into
lakes and larger rivers. It really is a dramatic hydrologic change
across the tundra landscape.”
A
comprehensive satellite image survey hasn’t been done to determine
how common polygon ice wedge patterns are in permafrost areas, but as
much as two-thirds of the Arctic landscape is suited to their
formation, Liljedahl said.
Gradual
warming of permafrost has been well-documented in the Arctic, but the
polygon study indicates that a brief period of unusual warmth can
cause a rapid shift in a short time period.
Surface melting is causing changes in the hydrology of areas with ice wedge polygons, according to a newly published study in the journal Nature Geoscience.
At
the sites that were studied, ice wedge degradation occurred in less
than a decade. In some cases, a single unusually warm summer was
enough to cause more than 10 centimeters of surface subsidence,
enough to result in pooling and runoff in an otherwise relatively
flat landscape.
Vladimir
Romanovsky, a UAF geophysics professor who monitored ice wedge
degradation for the study at a site in Canada, said the overall
conclusions of the study were striking.
“We
were not expecting to see these dramatic changes,” he said. “We
could see some other places where ice wedges were melting, but they
were all related to surface disturbances, or it happened a long time
ago. Whatever is happening, it’s something new for at least the
last 60 years in the Arctic.”
Other
contributors to the study include Julia Boike, Alfred Wegener
Institute; Ronald P. Daanen, Alaska Department of Natural Resources;
Alexander N. Fedorov, Melnikov Permafrost Institute; Gerald V. Frost,
ABR Inc. Environmental Research and Services; Guido Grosse, Alfred
Wegener Institute; Larry D. Hinzman, UAF; Yoshihiro Iijima, Japan
Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology; Janet C. Jorgenson,
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Arctic National Wildlife Refuge;
Nadya Matveyeva, Russian Academy of Sciences; Marius Necsoiu,
Southwest Research Institute; Martha K. Raynolds, UAF; Jorg Schulla,
Hyrdology Software Consulting; Ken D. Tape, UAF; Donald A. Walker,
UAF; Cathy Wilson, Los Alamos National Laboratory; Hironori Yabuki,
Japan Agency of Marine-Earth Science and Technology; and Donatella
Zona, San Diego State University and University of Sheffield.
A
press briefing will be held at 4 p.m. EST on Monday, March 14,
in Room 104 of the Chapman Building at the University of Alaska
Fairbanks and via live webcast at bit.ly/arcticnewsbriefing.
Journalists accessing the briefing online will be able to ask
questions via a chat window on the webcast page.
ADDITIONAL
CONTACT: Anna
Liljedahl, 907-474-1951, akliljedahl@alaska.edu
Further comment
Photo
by cmbellas. Massive numbers of Cryoconite holes.
I
don't think there has been anything in the history of the world that
compares to what is happening now. The perferation and rate of
deteriation of the ice by soot and other pollution is incredible
(Harold Hensell, via Facebook)
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