Long-term Measurements and Observations for the International Arctic Research Community on the Kuparuk River Basin, Alaska, 1985-2017

High latitude regions of the world are very sensitive to the climate and this is reflected in the hydrologic response of watersheds. Because of increasing greenhouse gases in our atmosphere, it is predicted that climate dynamics will change for these arctic regions. We already know that there are se...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Douglas Kane, Christopher Arp
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Arctic Data Center 2017
Subjects:
AON
Ice
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:8bf4dcfc-c532-4641-bb3e-fd8e1410a8b5
id dataone:urn:uuid:8bf4dcfc-c532-4641-bb3e-fd8e1410a8b5
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:urn:uuid:8bf4dcfc-c532-4641-bb3e-fd8e1410a8b5 2024-06-03T18:46:32+00:00 Long-term Measurements and Observations for the International Arctic Research Community on the Kuparuk River Basin, Alaska, 1985-2017 Douglas Kane Christopher Arp The geographic region covers Kuparuk River Watershed, Imnavait Creek Watershed, Upper Kuparuk River Watershed, and Putuligayuk River Watershed ENVELOPE(-150.448,-148.475,70.36,65.585) BEGINDATE: 1985-01-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2017-01-01T00:00:00Z 2017-01-01T00:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:8bf4dcfc-c532-4641-bb3e-fd8e1410a8b5 unknown Arctic Data Center AON Dataset 2017 dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC 2024-06-03T18:11:26Z High latitude regions of the world are very sensitive to the climate and this is reflected in the hydrologic response of watersheds. Because of increasing greenhouse gases in our atmosphere, it is predicted that climate dynamics will change for these arctic regions. We already know that there are seasonal extremes in climate (no solar radiation/24 hour solar radiation, -40/+20, snow/rain), we do not know if there are long-term trends or where these trends are going to take us (although the evidence is starting to amass). It is also known that phase change in many forms dominates the system: sublimation, evaporation, transpiration, freezing of water bodies and soils, thawing of soils and decay of ice on water bodies. It is also known that the winter season dominates the annual cycle by lasting eight to nine months. The overall goal of this project is to concentrate our research effort on an index watershed so that the International Research Community has quality, long-term data available to improve our understanding of hydrological processes, to detect and quantify climate induced change, to enable the development of new models to extrapolate hydrologically related processes in time and space and to verify remote sensing techniques. The watershed to be studied is the Kuparuk River on the North Slope of Alaska. This watershed is in an area of continuous permafrost, essentially treeless, the most accessible arctic watershed in Alaska, the most studied watershed in the Arctic presently, sufficiently large enough to allow atmospheric and surface processes to be coupled and data already exist for 11 years. The hydrologic cycle is the arteries, veins, and capillaries of the air-ice-land system of the Arctic; without an excellent understanding of the hydrologic cycle there is little hope for integrating biologic, chemical and physical processes across systems. Dataset Arctic Ice Long-term Measurements and Observations for the International Arctic Research Community on the Kuparuk River Basin, Alaska north slope permafrost Alaska Arctic Data Center (via DataONE) Arctic ENVELOPE(-150.448,-148.475,70.36,65.585)
institution Open Polar
collection Arctic Data Center (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC
language unknown
topic AON
spellingShingle AON
Douglas Kane
Christopher Arp
Long-term Measurements and Observations for the International Arctic Research Community on the Kuparuk River Basin, Alaska, 1985-2017
topic_facet AON
description High latitude regions of the world are very sensitive to the climate and this is reflected in the hydrologic response of watersheds. Because of increasing greenhouse gases in our atmosphere, it is predicted that climate dynamics will change for these arctic regions. We already know that there are seasonal extremes in climate (no solar radiation/24 hour solar radiation, -40/+20, snow/rain), we do not know if there are long-term trends or where these trends are going to take us (although the evidence is starting to amass). It is also known that phase change in many forms dominates the system: sublimation, evaporation, transpiration, freezing of water bodies and soils, thawing of soils and decay of ice on water bodies. It is also known that the winter season dominates the annual cycle by lasting eight to nine months. The overall goal of this project is to concentrate our research effort on an index watershed so that the International Research Community has quality, long-term data available to improve our understanding of hydrological processes, to detect and quantify climate induced change, to enable the development of new models to extrapolate hydrologically related processes in time and space and to verify remote sensing techniques. The watershed to be studied is the Kuparuk River on the North Slope of Alaska. This watershed is in an area of continuous permafrost, essentially treeless, the most accessible arctic watershed in Alaska, the most studied watershed in the Arctic presently, sufficiently large enough to allow atmospheric and surface processes to be coupled and data already exist for 11 years. The hydrologic cycle is the arteries, veins, and capillaries of the air-ice-land system of the Arctic; without an excellent understanding of the hydrologic cycle there is little hope for integrating biologic, chemical and physical processes across systems.
format Dataset
author Douglas Kane
Christopher Arp
author_facet Douglas Kane
Christopher Arp
author_sort Douglas Kane
title Long-term Measurements and Observations for the International Arctic Research Community on the Kuparuk River Basin, Alaska, 1985-2017
title_short Long-term Measurements and Observations for the International Arctic Research Community on the Kuparuk River Basin, Alaska, 1985-2017
title_full Long-term Measurements and Observations for the International Arctic Research Community on the Kuparuk River Basin, Alaska, 1985-2017
title_fullStr Long-term Measurements and Observations for the International Arctic Research Community on the Kuparuk River Basin, Alaska, 1985-2017
title_full_unstemmed Long-term Measurements and Observations for the International Arctic Research Community on the Kuparuk River Basin, Alaska, 1985-2017
title_sort long-term measurements and observations for the international arctic research community on the kuparuk river basin, alaska, 1985-2017
publisher Arctic Data Center
publishDate 2017
url https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:8bf4dcfc-c532-4641-bb3e-fd8e1410a8b5
op_coverage The geographic region covers Kuparuk River Watershed, Imnavait Creek Watershed, Upper Kuparuk River Watershed, and Putuligayuk River Watershed
ENVELOPE(-150.448,-148.475,70.36,65.585)
BEGINDATE: 1985-01-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2017-01-01T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(-150.448,-148.475,70.36,65.585)
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Ice
Long-term Measurements and Observations for the International Arctic Research Community on the Kuparuk River Basin, Alaska
north slope
permafrost
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Ice
Long-term Measurements and Observations for the International Arctic Research Community on the Kuparuk River Basin, Alaska
north slope
permafrost
Alaska
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