Permafrost Degradation Leaves Us on Thin Ice

The Tanana River flows through interior Alaska, a region characterized by discontinuous permafrost. Studies link degrading permafrost to increased winter river discharge due to increasing groundwater input. In winter, interior Alaskan rivers are exclusively fed by groundwater, which serves as an ext...

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Bibliographic Details
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: International Arctic Research Center (IARC) Data Archive
Subjects:
ice
Ice
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/dcx_6d0e99bd-db44-4ed1-909c-fd5b3927fb37_2
id dataone:dcx_6d0e99bd-db44-4ed1-909c-fd5b3927fb37_2
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:dcx_6d0e99bd-db44-4ed1-909c-fd5b3927fb37_2 2024-06-03T18:46:55+00:00 Permafrost Degradation Leaves Us on Thin Ice ENVELOPE(-180.0,-130.0,75.0,50.0) 2016-12-23T20:45:16.012Z https://search.dataone.org/view/dcx_6d0e99bd-db44-4ed1-909c-fd5b3927fb37_2 unknown International Arctic Research Center (IARC) Data Archive permafrost Alaska ice Dataset dataone:urn:node:IARC 2024-06-03T18:09:11Z The Tanana River flows through interior Alaska, a region characterized by discontinuous permafrost. Studies link degrading permafrost to increased winter river discharge due to increasing groundwater input. In winter, interior Alaskan rivers are exclusively fed by groundwater, which serves as an external source of heat. In fact, some portions of rivers fed by groundwater maintain thin ice throughout the winter, or remain altogether ice-free, despite very cold air temperatures. These ice conditions represent a significant danger to winter travellers who use rivers for wintertime travel, particularly in this largely roadless area. We developed a physically-based, numeric model to explore how fluctuations in groundwater discharge control ice thickness on the Tanana River. The model allows us to examine how changes in groundwater flow affect ice dynamics by addressing two questions: 1) What are the dominant factors controlling seasonal ice dynamics on the Tanana River? 2) What are the rates of change in ice thickness resulting from observed and projected changes in these factors? Dataset Ice permafrost Alaska International Arctic Research Center (IARC) Data Archive (via DataONE) Winter River ENVELOPE(-113.003,-113.003,64.501,64.501) ENVELOPE(-180.0,-130.0,75.0,50.0)
institution Open Polar
collection International Arctic Research Center (IARC) Data Archive (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:IARC
language unknown
topic permafrost
Alaska
ice
spellingShingle permafrost
Alaska
ice
Permafrost Degradation Leaves Us on Thin Ice
topic_facet permafrost
Alaska
ice
description The Tanana River flows through interior Alaska, a region characterized by discontinuous permafrost. Studies link degrading permafrost to increased winter river discharge due to increasing groundwater input. In winter, interior Alaskan rivers are exclusively fed by groundwater, which serves as an external source of heat. In fact, some portions of rivers fed by groundwater maintain thin ice throughout the winter, or remain altogether ice-free, despite very cold air temperatures. These ice conditions represent a significant danger to winter travellers who use rivers for wintertime travel, particularly in this largely roadless area. We developed a physically-based, numeric model to explore how fluctuations in groundwater discharge control ice thickness on the Tanana River. The model allows us to examine how changes in groundwater flow affect ice dynamics by addressing two questions: 1) What are the dominant factors controlling seasonal ice dynamics on the Tanana River? 2) What are the rates of change in ice thickness resulting from observed and projected changes in these factors?
format Dataset
title Permafrost Degradation Leaves Us on Thin Ice
title_short Permafrost Degradation Leaves Us on Thin Ice
title_full Permafrost Degradation Leaves Us on Thin Ice
title_fullStr Permafrost Degradation Leaves Us on Thin Ice
title_full_unstemmed Permafrost Degradation Leaves Us on Thin Ice
title_sort permafrost degradation leaves us on thin ice
publisher International Arctic Research Center (IARC) Data Archive
publishDate
url https://search.dataone.org/view/dcx_6d0e99bd-db44-4ed1-909c-fd5b3927fb37_2
op_coverage ENVELOPE(-180.0,-130.0,75.0,50.0)
long_lat ENVELOPE(-113.003,-113.003,64.501,64.501)
ENVELOPE(-180.0,-130.0,75.0,50.0)
geographic Winter River
geographic_facet Winter River
genre Ice
permafrost
Alaska
genre_facet Ice
permafrost
Alaska
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