Tundra Disturbances and Recovery Following the 1949 Exploratory Drilling, Fish Creek, Northern Alaska

A 1949 drill site in the Naval Petroleum Reserve Number 4, Alaska, the Fish Creek Test Well 1, was examined in August 1977 to determine the disturbance caused by drilling activities and to analyze the response and recovery of vegetation, soils, permafrost, and surficial materials to that disturbance...

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Main Authors: Lawson,D E, Brown,J, Everett,K R, Johnson,A W, Komarkova,V
Other Authors: COLD REGIONS RESEARCH AND ENGINEERING LAB HANOVER N H
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 1978
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA065192
http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADA065192
id ftdtic:ADA065192
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdtic:ADA065192 2023-05-15T15:13:41+02:00 Tundra Disturbances and Recovery Following the 1949 Exploratory Drilling, Fish Creek, Northern Alaska Lawson,D E Brown,J Everett,K R Johnson,A W Komarkova,V COLD REGIONS RESEARCH AND ENGINEERING LAB HANOVER N H 1978-12 text/html http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA065192 http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADA065192 en eng http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA065192 APPROVED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE DTIC AND NTIS Military Operations Strategy and Tactics *COLD WEATHER OPERATIONS *TUNDRA ALASKA METEOROLOGICAL DATA EROSION MELTING ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION VEGETATION POLLUTION DRILLING ARCTIC REGIONS PERMAFROST *Fish Creek AST24 PE61102A WU002 Text 1978 ftdtic 2016-02-20T15:36:42Z A 1949 drill site in the Naval Petroleum Reserve Number 4, Alaska, the Fish Creek Test Well 1, was examined in August 1977 to determine the disturbance caused by drilling activities and to analyze the response and recovery of vegetation, soils, permafrost, and surficial materials to that disturbance. Man-made disturbances include bladed and unbladed vehicular trails, a winter runway, excavations, pilings, remains of camp structures, steel drums and other solid waste, and hydrocarbon spills. The most intense and lasting disturbance to the vegetation, soils, and permafrost resulted from bulldozing of surface materials, diesel fuel spills, and trails developed by multiple passes of vehicles. Thermokarst subsidence and thermal erosion, caused by increased thaw of permafrost due to disturbance, resulted in the development of a hummocky topography and water-filled depressions at the drill site. Some ice wedges disturbed in 1949 are still melting. Soil disturbance ranges from minor modification to complete destruction of the soil morphology. The effects of hydrocarbon spills are still detectable in the soils. Little of the original vegetation remains in the intensely disturbed area, such as around the drill pad where a grass-dominated community prevails. After 28 years, the vegetation cover is closed over most mesic sites, shallow wet sites are well vegetated, and xeric sites, areas of diesel fuel spills and areas of severe erosion remain mostly bare. Pioneering plant species on bare, disturbed areas are members of mature vegetation assemblages from the undisturbed tundra which have high reproductive and dispersal capacities. A hypothetical model of natural revegetation and vegetation recovery is proposed. Text Arctic Ice permafrost Thermokarst Tundra wedge* Alaska Defense Technical Information Center: DTIC Technical Reports database Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Defense Technical Information Center: DTIC Technical Reports database
op_collection_id ftdtic
language English
topic Military Operations
Strategy and Tactics
*COLD WEATHER OPERATIONS
*TUNDRA
ALASKA
METEOROLOGICAL DATA
EROSION
MELTING
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
VEGETATION
POLLUTION
DRILLING
ARCTIC REGIONS
PERMAFROST
*Fish Creek
AST24
PE61102A
WU002
spellingShingle Military Operations
Strategy and Tactics
*COLD WEATHER OPERATIONS
*TUNDRA
ALASKA
METEOROLOGICAL DATA
EROSION
MELTING
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
VEGETATION
POLLUTION
DRILLING
ARCTIC REGIONS
PERMAFROST
*Fish Creek
AST24
PE61102A
WU002
Lawson,D E
Brown,J
Everett,K R
Johnson,A W
Komarkova,V
Tundra Disturbances and Recovery Following the 1949 Exploratory Drilling, Fish Creek, Northern Alaska
topic_facet Military Operations
Strategy and Tactics
*COLD WEATHER OPERATIONS
*TUNDRA
ALASKA
METEOROLOGICAL DATA
EROSION
MELTING
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
VEGETATION
POLLUTION
DRILLING
ARCTIC REGIONS
PERMAFROST
*Fish Creek
AST24
PE61102A
WU002
description A 1949 drill site in the Naval Petroleum Reserve Number 4, Alaska, the Fish Creek Test Well 1, was examined in August 1977 to determine the disturbance caused by drilling activities and to analyze the response and recovery of vegetation, soils, permafrost, and surficial materials to that disturbance. Man-made disturbances include bladed and unbladed vehicular trails, a winter runway, excavations, pilings, remains of camp structures, steel drums and other solid waste, and hydrocarbon spills. The most intense and lasting disturbance to the vegetation, soils, and permafrost resulted from bulldozing of surface materials, diesel fuel spills, and trails developed by multiple passes of vehicles. Thermokarst subsidence and thermal erosion, caused by increased thaw of permafrost due to disturbance, resulted in the development of a hummocky topography and water-filled depressions at the drill site. Some ice wedges disturbed in 1949 are still melting. Soil disturbance ranges from minor modification to complete destruction of the soil morphology. The effects of hydrocarbon spills are still detectable in the soils. Little of the original vegetation remains in the intensely disturbed area, such as around the drill pad where a grass-dominated community prevails. After 28 years, the vegetation cover is closed over most mesic sites, shallow wet sites are well vegetated, and xeric sites, areas of diesel fuel spills and areas of severe erosion remain mostly bare. Pioneering plant species on bare, disturbed areas are members of mature vegetation assemblages from the undisturbed tundra which have high reproductive and dispersal capacities. A hypothetical model of natural revegetation and vegetation recovery is proposed.
author2 COLD REGIONS RESEARCH AND ENGINEERING LAB HANOVER N H
format Text
author Lawson,D E
Brown,J
Everett,K R
Johnson,A W
Komarkova,V
author_facet Lawson,D E
Brown,J
Everett,K R
Johnson,A W
Komarkova,V
author_sort Lawson,D E
title Tundra Disturbances and Recovery Following the 1949 Exploratory Drilling, Fish Creek, Northern Alaska
title_short Tundra Disturbances and Recovery Following the 1949 Exploratory Drilling, Fish Creek, Northern Alaska
title_full Tundra Disturbances and Recovery Following the 1949 Exploratory Drilling, Fish Creek, Northern Alaska
title_fullStr Tundra Disturbances and Recovery Following the 1949 Exploratory Drilling, Fish Creek, Northern Alaska
title_full_unstemmed Tundra Disturbances and Recovery Following the 1949 Exploratory Drilling, Fish Creek, Northern Alaska
title_sort tundra disturbances and recovery following the 1949 exploratory drilling, fish creek, northern alaska
publishDate 1978
url http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA065192
http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADA065192
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Ice
permafrost
Thermokarst
Tundra
wedge*
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Ice
permafrost
Thermokarst
Tundra
wedge*
Alaska
op_source DTIC AND NTIS
op_relation http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA065192
op_rights APPROVED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE
_version_ 1766344207090319360