Woody debris at Alaska permafrost borehole sites, 2015 (ViPER project)

The objective of this project is to examine the impacts of vegetation and ecosystem properties on active layer and permafrost thermal dynamics in order to better understand the vulnerability of permafrost to climate change. Datasets associated with the project include soil, vegetation, and ground te...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Susan Natali, Alexander Kholodov, Michael Loranty
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Arctic Data Center 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.18739/A2X05XC9W
Description
Summary:The objective of this project is to examine the impacts of vegetation and ecosystem properties on active layer and permafrost thermal dynamics in order to better understand the vulnerability of permafrost to climate change. Datasets associated with the project include soil, vegetation, and ground temperature data from permafrost borehole sites in Alaska and NE Siberia. This dataset includes fine and coarse woody debris mass from borehole sites in Alaska, sampled in July-August 2015. Files associated with this dataset include extended metadata, site coordinates, and woody debris data.