Infrastructure-Thermokarst-Soil-Vegetation Interactions at Lake Colleen, Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, August 2014

This data report contains methods and data from transects, permanent vegetation plots, and permafrost boreholes sampled during 2-13 August 2014, at Colleen Site A, Prudhoe Bay, Alaska for the Arctic Science, Engineering, and Education for Sustainability (ArcSEES). The project 'Cumulative effect...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Donald A. Walker
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Arctic Data Center 2018
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:e65182f4-8cc3-4430-b8c3-6831480982cf
id dataone:urn:uuid:e65182f4-8cc3-4430-b8c3-6831480982cf
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:urn:uuid:e65182f4-8cc3-4430-b8c3-6831480982cf 2024-06-03T18:46:37+00:00 Infrastructure-Thermokarst-Soil-Vegetation Interactions at Lake Colleen, Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, August 2014 Donald A. Walker GEOGRAPHIC REGION > ARCTIC, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA > ALASKA, ENVELOPE(-148.5339,-148.4167,70.2306,70.2) BEGINDATE: 2014-08-06T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2014-08-13T00:00:00Z 2018-04-10T00:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:e65182f4-8cc3-4430-b8c3-6831480982cf unknown Arctic Data Center FIELD SURVEY TRANSECT POINT GRID Dataset 2018 dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC 2024-06-03T18:16:39Z This data report contains methods and data from transects, permanent vegetation plots, and permafrost boreholes sampled during 2-13 August 2014, at Colleen Site A, Prudhoe Bay, Alaska for the Arctic Science, Engineering, and Education for Sustainability (ArcSEES). The project 'Cumulative effects of Arctic oil development-planning and designing for sustainability' was funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF Grant Nr. 1233854). The Colleen site is located along the Spine Road, the oldest, most heavily traveled road in the Prudhoe Bay region. It is situated in a previously relatively homogeneous low-center ice-wedge polygon landscape that has undergone thermokarst and other disturbances due to climate change and the presence of the road. The main objectives of the 2014 field program were to document the extent and effects of these disturbances to the topography, landforms, permafrost, soils and vegetation. We were particularly interested in changes to the permafrost and ice-wedges. The area of the study site is defined as a 60-m wide swath centered on two 200-m transects. Transect (T1) is on the relatively well-drained northeast side of the road and Transect (T2) is on the flooded southwest side. The report contains measurements of surveyed ground elevations, thaw depths, water depths, dust-layer thickness, vegetation height, and leaf area index (LAI) at one-meter intervals along each transect. Permanent vegetation plots were established at intervals along the transects in polygon centers and troughs and cover of plant species was measured using both point intercept and Braun-Blanquet methods. A soil pit was dug adjacent to each vegetation plot. Included in the report is a record of the installation locations of iButtonĀ® temperature loggers to measure above- and below-ground temperatures along the transects and in the vegetation plots through the next year. A full description of the project goals, methods, data, and conclusions from the 2014 field season are in Alaska Geobotany Center Data Report AGC 15-01 (Walker et al. 2015). Description and maps of the vegetation, landscapes, and permafrost and recent changes in the Prudhoe Bay Oilfield are in Walker et al. 1980, Walker 1985, Walker et al. 2014, and Raynolds et al. 2014. References cited here are included in AGC 15-01. Dataset Arctic Climate change Cumulative Effects of Arctic Oil Development - planning and designing for sustainability Ice permafrost Prudhoe Bay Thermokarst wedge* Alaska Arctic Data Center (via DataONE) Arctic Colleen ENVELOPE(163.867,163.867,-78.033,-78.033) Lake Colleen ENVELOPE(163.867,163.867,-78.033,-78.033) ENVELOPE(-148.5339,-148.4167,70.2306,70.2)
institution Open Polar
collection Arctic Data Center (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC
language unknown
topic FIELD SURVEY
TRANSECT
POINT
GRID
spellingShingle FIELD SURVEY
TRANSECT
POINT
GRID
Donald A. Walker
Infrastructure-Thermokarst-Soil-Vegetation Interactions at Lake Colleen, Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, August 2014
topic_facet FIELD SURVEY
TRANSECT
POINT
GRID
description This data report contains methods and data from transects, permanent vegetation plots, and permafrost boreholes sampled during 2-13 August 2014, at Colleen Site A, Prudhoe Bay, Alaska for the Arctic Science, Engineering, and Education for Sustainability (ArcSEES). The project 'Cumulative effects of Arctic oil development-planning and designing for sustainability' was funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF Grant Nr. 1233854). The Colleen site is located along the Spine Road, the oldest, most heavily traveled road in the Prudhoe Bay region. It is situated in a previously relatively homogeneous low-center ice-wedge polygon landscape that has undergone thermokarst and other disturbances due to climate change and the presence of the road. The main objectives of the 2014 field program were to document the extent and effects of these disturbances to the topography, landforms, permafrost, soils and vegetation. We were particularly interested in changes to the permafrost and ice-wedges. The area of the study site is defined as a 60-m wide swath centered on two 200-m transects. Transect (T1) is on the relatively well-drained northeast side of the road and Transect (T2) is on the flooded southwest side. The report contains measurements of surveyed ground elevations, thaw depths, water depths, dust-layer thickness, vegetation height, and leaf area index (LAI) at one-meter intervals along each transect. Permanent vegetation plots were established at intervals along the transects in polygon centers and troughs and cover of plant species was measured using both point intercept and Braun-Blanquet methods. A soil pit was dug adjacent to each vegetation plot. Included in the report is a record of the installation locations of iButtonĀ® temperature loggers to measure above- and below-ground temperatures along the transects and in the vegetation plots through the next year. A full description of the project goals, methods, data, and conclusions from the 2014 field season are in Alaska Geobotany Center Data Report AGC 15-01 (Walker et al. 2015). Description and maps of the vegetation, landscapes, and permafrost and recent changes in the Prudhoe Bay Oilfield are in Walker et al. 1980, Walker 1985, Walker et al. 2014, and Raynolds et al. 2014. References cited here are included in AGC 15-01.
format Dataset
author Donald A. Walker
author_facet Donald A. Walker
author_sort Donald A. Walker
title Infrastructure-Thermokarst-Soil-Vegetation Interactions at Lake Colleen, Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, August 2014
title_short Infrastructure-Thermokarst-Soil-Vegetation Interactions at Lake Colleen, Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, August 2014
title_full Infrastructure-Thermokarst-Soil-Vegetation Interactions at Lake Colleen, Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, August 2014
title_fullStr Infrastructure-Thermokarst-Soil-Vegetation Interactions at Lake Colleen, Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, August 2014
title_full_unstemmed Infrastructure-Thermokarst-Soil-Vegetation Interactions at Lake Colleen, Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, August 2014
title_sort infrastructure-thermokarst-soil-vegetation interactions at lake colleen, prudhoe bay, alaska, august 2014
publisher Arctic Data Center
publishDate 2018
url https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:e65182f4-8cc3-4430-b8c3-6831480982cf
op_coverage GEOGRAPHIC REGION > ARCTIC, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA > ALASKA,
ENVELOPE(-148.5339,-148.4167,70.2306,70.2)
BEGINDATE: 2014-08-06T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2014-08-13T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(163.867,163.867,-78.033,-78.033)
ENVELOPE(163.867,163.867,-78.033,-78.033)
ENVELOPE(-148.5339,-148.4167,70.2306,70.2)
geographic Arctic
Colleen
Lake Colleen
geographic_facet Arctic
Colleen
Lake Colleen
genre Arctic
Climate change
Cumulative Effects of Arctic Oil Development - planning and designing for sustainability
Ice
permafrost
Prudhoe Bay
Thermokarst
wedge*
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
Cumulative Effects of Arctic Oil Development - planning and designing for sustainability
Ice
permafrost
Prudhoe Bay
Thermokarst
wedge*
Alaska
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