Batagay megaslump: a review of the permafrost deposits, Quaternary environmental history, and recent development

Abstract The Batagay megaslump, in the Yana Uplands of northern Yakutia, Russia, is the largest known retrogressive thaw slump in the world. The slump exposes a remarkable sequence of Ice Age permafrost deposits that record the interaction of colluvial, eolian and periglacial processes on a hillslop...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Permafrost and Periglacial Processes
Main Authors: Murton, J., Opel, T., Wetterich, S., Ashastina, K., Savvinov, G., Danilov, P., Boeskorov, V.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000D-5B69-8
http://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000D-5B6B-6
Description
Summary:Abstract The Batagay megaslump, in the Yana Uplands of northern Yakutia, Russia, is the largest known retrogressive thaw slump in the world. The slump exposes a remarkable sequence of Ice Age permafrost deposits that record the interaction of colluvial, eolian and periglacial processes on a hillslope episodically forested during the last 650?ka or more in response to climate variability on glacial?interglacial timescales. Numerous bones, teeth, and occasional carcasses of Pleistocene and Holocene mammals have been recovered from the permafrost. The megaslump developed over the course of several decades in three stages: (1) gullying, (2) thaw slumping, and (3) megaslumping. After disturbance to the taiga vegetation cover in the 1940s?1960s, a hillslope gully formed by the early 1960s. The gully initiated thaw slumping along its central part during the 1980s, with the slump enlarging to megaslump (>20?ha) proportions during the 1990s. By 2019, the area of the slump had reached about 80?ha and its headwall above the slump floor was up to about 55?m high. The main geomorphic processes of slump growth are headwall ablation and thermal erosion, producing a distinctive terrain of icy badlands on the slump floor. Though much of the megaslump is rapidly growing at present, it will probably stabilize eventually as an irregular terrain characterized by sandy ridges and sand-filled elongate depressions formed by degradation of the badlands. Comparison of the Batagay megaslump with megaslumps from northwest Canada reveals several similarities and differences in terms of their geomorphology, permafrost deposits, and Quaternary history. 1 Introduction 2 Regional setting 3 Site description 4 Permafrost deposits and quaternary environmental change 4.1 Cryostratigraphy and chronology 4.2 Ground ice 4.3 Vertebrate remains 4.4 Plant and insect remains 4.5 Ancient DNA and biomarkers 4.6 Pleistocene and Holocene environmental history 5 Recent megaslump development 5.1 Chronology 5.2 Headwall ablation 5.3 Thermal erosion 5.4 ...