Collaborative research: Developing a System Model of Arctic Glacial Lake Sedimentation for Investigating Past and Future Climate Change

Accurate records of natural variability that cover broad temporal and spatial scales, and that capture intervals of non-linear change are needed to fully comprehend the arctic system. This project aims to develop the first system model to simulate the full chain of processes that control how weather...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Darrell Kaufman, David Fortin, Erik Schiefer, Lorna Thurston, Jason Geck, Michael Loso, Nicholas McKay, Anna Liljedahl
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Arctic Data Center 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:d2942df2-d3ef-4219-af60-a89240027819
Description
Summary:Accurate records of natural variability that cover broad temporal and spatial scales, and that capture intervals of non-linear change are needed to fully comprehend the arctic system. This project aims to develop the first system model to simulate the full chain of processes that control how weather and climate affect the processes that lead to deposition of a sediment record in lakes in glaciated watersheds. This model provides an alternative approach to previous statistically-based models traditionally used by paleo-climatologists to infer past climate variability from lake sediment records. The new process-based quantitative understanding will lay the groundwork for future studies that will be aimed at recovering records of environmental and climate change that extend back thousands of years. This project will contribute to ongoing efforts through collaborations with: utility managers of the Municipality of Anchorage who are planning for diminished glacier meltwater input to Eklutna Lake, a major source of their electricity and freshwater and with resource managers at US Fish and Wildlife Service who are developing a monitoring network for the Arctic Refuge and who are striving to foresee future changes in habitat quality associated with glacier retreat. This project will benefit climate science researchers by leading to more accurate climate reconstructions, which will be used as benchmarks for validating global climate model output. Finally, it will support four early-career scientists and will train graduate and undergraduate students in system-science research.