Permafrost Distribution, Zonation and Stability along the Eastern Ranges of the Cordillera of North America

Considerable quantities of new data have become available recently regarding the nature and distribution of permafrost along the eastern ranges of the Cordillera. These are used to produce an elevation view of permafrost in the ranges north of the 35°N parallel. In the south, there is a zone of spor...

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Published in:ARCTIC
Main Author: Harris, Stuart A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: The Arctic Institute of North America 1986
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65094
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spelling ftunivcalgaryojs:oai:journalhosting.ucalgary.ca:article/65094 2023-05-15T14:19:14+02:00 Permafrost Distribution, Zonation and Stability along the Eastern Ranges of the Cordillera of North America Harris, Stuart A. 1986-01-01 application/pdf https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65094 eng eng The Arctic Institute of North America https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65094/49008 https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65094 ARCTIC; Vol. 39 No. 1 (1986): March: 1–107; 29-38 1923-1245 0004-0843 Permafrost Spatial distribution Alaska British Columbia Northern Rocky Mountains Alberta Yukon info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion research-article 1986 ftunivcalgaryojs 2022-03-22T21:22:12Z Considerable quantities of new data have become available recently regarding the nature and distribution of permafrost along the eastern ranges of the Cordillera. These are used to produce an elevation view of permafrost in the ranges north of the 35°N parallel. In the south, there is a zone of sporadic permafrost up to 1,000 m in vertical extent overlain by continuous permafrost. The zone of discontinuous permafrost (30-80 percent of the surface with permafrost) is only about 70 m in vertical extent. North of 54°N this changes, with discontinuous permafrost encroaching on the sporadic permafrost zone. The apparent permafrost boundaries differ from those of Brown (1967), Péwé (1983a) and Cheng Guodong (1983). Their work was based on considerably less data, and it is clear that the terrain factors of mean winter snow depth, local moisture and ground water conditions, the distribution of the different air masses and cold air drainage have considerable effect locally, causing undulations and abrupt changes in the lower limit of the permafrost boundaries to about 56°N. Farther north, the climatic factors become dominant. The lower boundaries are different for a different latitude in North America and China. Subdivision of the alpine permafrost into stable, metastable and unstable classes is useful in indicating the instability of alpine permafrost (Cheng Guodong, 1983) and shows that most of the permafrost found in mainland Canada and Alaska is unstable or metastable.Key words: permafrost distribution, permafrost thermal stability, eastern Cordillera of North America, alpine permafrost, permafrost zonation Mots clés: distributions du pergélisol, stabilité thermale du pergélisol, cordillère est de l'Amérique du Nord, pergélisol alpin, zonage du pergélisol Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic permafrost Alaska pergélisol Yukon University of Calgary Journal Hosting British Columbia ENVELOPE(-125.003,-125.003,54.000,54.000) Canada Péwé ENVELOPE(164.300,164.300,-77.933,-77.933) Yukon ARCTIC 39 1
institution Open Polar
collection University of Calgary Journal Hosting
op_collection_id ftunivcalgaryojs
language English
topic Permafrost
Spatial distribution
Alaska
British Columbia
Northern
Rocky Mountains
Alberta
Yukon
spellingShingle Permafrost
Spatial distribution
Alaska
British Columbia
Northern
Rocky Mountains
Alberta
Yukon
Harris, Stuart A.
Permafrost Distribution, Zonation and Stability along the Eastern Ranges of the Cordillera of North America
topic_facet Permafrost
Spatial distribution
Alaska
British Columbia
Northern
Rocky Mountains
Alberta
Yukon
description Considerable quantities of new data have become available recently regarding the nature and distribution of permafrost along the eastern ranges of the Cordillera. These are used to produce an elevation view of permafrost in the ranges north of the 35°N parallel. In the south, there is a zone of sporadic permafrost up to 1,000 m in vertical extent overlain by continuous permafrost. The zone of discontinuous permafrost (30-80 percent of the surface with permafrost) is only about 70 m in vertical extent. North of 54°N this changes, with discontinuous permafrost encroaching on the sporadic permafrost zone. The apparent permafrost boundaries differ from those of Brown (1967), Péwé (1983a) and Cheng Guodong (1983). Their work was based on considerably less data, and it is clear that the terrain factors of mean winter snow depth, local moisture and ground water conditions, the distribution of the different air masses and cold air drainage have considerable effect locally, causing undulations and abrupt changes in the lower limit of the permafrost boundaries to about 56°N. Farther north, the climatic factors become dominant. The lower boundaries are different for a different latitude in North America and China. Subdivision of the alpine permafrost into stable, metastable and unstable classes is useful in indicating the instability of alpine permafrost (Cheng Guodong, 1983) and shows that most of the permafrost found in mainland Canada and Alaska is unstable or metastable.Key words: permafrost distribution, permafrost thermal stability, eastern Cordillera of North America, alpine permafrost, permafrost zonation Mots clés: distributions du pergélisol, stabilité thermale du pergélisol, cordillère est de l'Amérique du Nord, pergélisol alpin, zonage du pergélisol
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Harris, Stuart A.
author_facet Harris, Stuart A.
author_sort Harris, Stuart A.
title Permafrost Distribution, Zonation and Stability along the Eastern Ranges of the Cordillera of North America
title_short Permafrost Distribution, Zonation and Stability along the Eastern Ranges of the Cordillera of North America
title_full Permafrost Distribution, Zonation and Stability along the Eastern Ranges of the Cordillera of North America
title_fullStr Permafrost Distribution, Zonation and Stability along the Eastern Ranges of the Cordillera of North America
title_full_unstemmed Permafrost Distribution, Zonation and Stability along the Eastern Ranges of the Cordillera of North America
title_sort permafrost distribution, zonation and stability along the eastern ranges of the cordillera of north america
publisher The Arctic Institute of North America
publishDate 1986
url https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65094
long_lat ENVELOPE(-125.003,-125.003,54.000,54.000)
ENVELOPE(164.300,164.300,-77.933,-77.933)
geographic British Columbia
Canada
Péwé
Yukon
geographic_facet British Columbia
Canada
Péwé
Yukon
genre Arctic
permafrost
Alaska
pergélisol
Yukon
genre_facet Arctic
permafrost
Alaska
pergélisol
Yukon
op_source ARCTIC; Vol. 39 No. 1 (1986): March: 1–107; 29-38
1923-1245
0004-0843
op_relation https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65094/49008
https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65094
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