Permafrost Thaw Accelerates in Boreal Peatlands During Late-20th Century Climate Warming

Permafrost covers 25% of the land surface in the northern hemisphere, where mean annual ground temperature is less than 0◦C. A 1.4–5.8 ◦C warming by 2100 will likely change the sign of mean annual air and ground temperatures over much of the zones of sporadic and discontinuous permafrost in th...

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Main Author: Camil, Philip
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Carleton Digital Commons 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.carleton.edu/biol_faculty/2
https://digitalcommons.carleton.edu/context/biol_faculty/article/1006/viewcontent/004_Camill_Phil_PermafrostThawAcceleratesInBorealPeatlands.pdf
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spelling ftcarletoncoll:oai:digitalcommons.carleton.edu:biol_faculty-1006 2024-06-02T08:12:56+00:00 Permafrost Thaw Accelerates in Boreal Peatlands During Late-20th Century Climate Warming Camil, Philip 2004-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://digitalcommons.carleton.edu/biol_faculty/2 https://digitalcommons.carleton.edu/context/biol_faculty/article/1006/viewcontent/004_Camill_Phil_PermafrostThawAcceleratesInBorealPeatlands.pdf English eng Carleton Digital Commons https://digitalcommons.carleton.edu/biol_faculty/2 https://digitalcommons.carleton.edu/context/biol_faculty/article/1006/viewcontent/004_Camill_Phil_PermafrostThawAcceleratesInBorealPeatlands.pdf Faculty Work Biology Life Sciences text 2004 ftcarletoncoll 2024-05-07T07:50:58Z Permafrost covers 25% of the land surface in the northern hemisphere, where mean annual ground temperature is less than 0◦C. A 1.4–5.8 ◦C warming by 2100 will likely change the sign of mean annual air and ground temperatures over much of the zones of sporadic and discontinuous permafrost in the northern hemisphere, causing widespread permafrost thaw. In this study, I examined rates of discontinuous permafrost thaw in the boreal peatlands of northern Manitoba, Canada, using a combination of tree-ring analyses to document thaw rates from 1941–1991 and direct measurements of permanent benchmarks established in 1995 and resurveyed in 2002. I used instrumented records of mean annual and seasonal air temperatures, mean winter snow depth, and duration of continuous snow pack from climate stations across northern Manitoba to analyze temporal and spatial trends in these variables and their potential impacts on thaw. Permafrost thaw in central Canadian peatlands has accelerated significantly since 1950, concurrent with a significant, late-20th-century average climate warming of +1.32 ◦C in this region. There were strong seasonal differences in warming in northern Manitoba, with highest rates of warming during winter (+1.39 ◦C to +1.66 ◦C) and spring (+0.56 ◦C to +0.78 ◦C) at southern climate stations where permafrost thaw was most rapid. Projecting current warming trends to year 2100, I show that trends for north-central Canada are in good agreement with general circulation models, which suggest a 4–8 ◦C warming at high latitudes. This magnitude of warming will begin to eliminate most of the present range of sporadic and discontinuous permafrost in central Canada by 2100. Text permafrost Carleton College: Digital Commons Canada
institution Open Polar
collection Carleton College: Digital Commons
op_collection_id ftcarletoncoll
language English
topic Biology
Life Sciences
spellingShingle Biology
Life Sciences
Camil, Philip
Permafrost Thaw Accelerates in Boreal Peatlands During Late-20th Century Climate Warming
topic_facet Biology
Life Sciences
description Permafrost covers 25% of the land surface in the northern hemisphere, where mean annual ground temperature is less than 0◦C. A 1.4–5.8 ◦C warming by 2100 will likely change the sign of mean annual air and ground temperatures over much of the zones of sporadic and discontinuous permafrost in the northern hemisphere, causing widespread permafrost thaw. In this study, I examined rates of discontinuous permafrost thaw in the boreal peatlands of northern Manitoba, Canada, using a combination of tree-ring analyses to document thaw rates from 1941–1991 and direct measurements of permanent benchmarks established in 1995 and resurveyed in 2002. I used instrumented records of mean annual and seasonal air temperatures, mean winter snow depth, and duration of continuous snow pack from climate stations across northern Manitoba to analyze temporal and spatial trends in these variables and their potential impacts on thaw. Permafrost thaw in central Canadian peatlands has accelerated significantly since 1950, concurrent with a significant, late-20th-century average climate warming of +1.32 ◦C in this region. There were strong seasonal differences in warming in northern Manitoba, with highest rates of warming during winter (+1.39 ◦C to +1.66 ◦C) and spring (+0.56 ◦C to +0.78 ◦C) at southern climate stations where permafrost thaw was most rapid. Projecting current warming trends to year 2100, I show that trends for north-central Canada are in good agreement with general circulation models, which suggest a 4–8 ◦C warming at high latitudes. This magnitude of warming will begin to eliminate most of the present range of sporadic and discontinuous permafrost in central Canada by 2100.
format Text
author Camil, Philip
author_facet Camil, Philip
author_sort Camil, Philip
title Permafrost Thaw Accelerates in Boreal Peatlands During Late-20th Century Climate Warming
title_short Permafrost Thaw Accelerates in Boreal Peatlands During Late-20th Century Climate Warming
title_full Permafrost Thaw Accelerates in Boreal Peatlands During Late-20th Century Climate Warming
title_fullStr Permafrost Thaw Accelerates in Boreal Peatlands During Late-20th Century Climate Warming
title_full_unstemmed Permafrost Thaw Accelerates in Boreal Peatlands During Late-20th Century Climate Warming
title_sort permafrost thaw accelerates in boreal peatlands during late-20th century climate warming
publisher Carleton Digital Commons
publishDate 2004
url https://digitalcommons.carleton.edu/biol_faculty/2
https://digitalcommons.carleton.edu/context/biol_faculty/article/1006/viewcontent/004_Camill_Phil_PermafrostThawAcceleratesInBorealPeatlands.pdf
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre permafrost
genre_facet permafrost
op_source Faculty Work
op_relation https://digitalcommons.carleton.edu/biol_faculty/2
https://digitalcommons.carleton.edu/context/biol_faculty/article/1006/viewcontent/004_Camill_Phil_PermafrostThawAcceleratesInBorealPeatlands.pdf
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