Permafrost and climate in Europe: Monitoring and modelling thermal, geomorphological and geotechnical responses

We present a review of the changing state of European permafrost within a spatial zone that includes the continuous high latitude arctic permafrost of Svalbard and the discontinuous high altitude mountain permafrost of Iceland, Fennoscandia and the Alps. The paper focuses on methodological developme...

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Main Authors: Charles Harris, Lukas U Arenson, Hanne H Christiansen, Julian Murton
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Permafrost_and_climate_in_Europe_Monitoring_and_modelling_thermal_geomorphological_and_geotechnical_responses/23321534
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spelling ftunivsussexfig:oai:figshare.com:article/23321534 2023-06-18T03:35:36+02:00 Permafrost and climate in Europe: Monitoring and modelling thermal, geomorphological and geotechnical responses Charles Harris Lukas U Arenson Hanne H Christiansen Julian Murton 2009-02-01T00:00:00Z https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Permafrost_and_climate_in_Europe_Monitoring_and_modelling_thermal_geomorphological_and_geotechnical_responses/23321534 unknown 10779/uos.23321534.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Permafrost_and_climate_in_Europe_Monitoring_and_modelling_thermal_geomorphological_and_geotechnical_responses/23321534 Copyright not evaluated Uncategorised value Text Journal contribution 2009 ftunivsussexfig 2023-06-07T23:30:27Z We present a review of the changing state of European permafrost within a spatial zone that includes the continuous high latitude arctic permafrost of Svalbard and the discontinuous high altitude mountain permafrost of Iceland, Fennoscandia and the Alps. The paper focuses on methodological developments and data collection over the last decade or so, including research associated with the continent-scale network of instrumented permafrost boreholes established between 1998 and 2001 under the European Union PACE project. Data indicate recent warming trends, with greatest warming at higher latitudes. Equally important are the impacts of shorter-term extreme climatic events, most immediately reflected in changes in active layer thickness. A large number of complex variables, including altitude, topography, insolation and snow distribution, determine permafrost temperatures. The development of regionally calibrated empirical-statistical models, and physically based process-oriented models, is described, and it is shown that, though more complex and data dependent, process-oriented approaches are better suited to estimating transient effects of climate change in complex mountain topography. Mapping and characterisation of permafrost depth and distribution requires integrated multiple geophysical approaches and recent advances are discussed. We report on recent research into ground ice formation, including ice segregation within bedrock and vein ice formation within ice wedge systems. The potential impacts of climate change on rock weathering, permafrost creep, landslides, rock falls, debris flows and slow mass movements are also discussed. Recent engineering responses to the potentially damaging effects of climate warming are outlined, and risk assessment strategies to minimise geological hazards are described. We conclude that forecasting changes in hazard occurrence, magnitude and frequency is likely to depend on process-based modelling, demanding improved understanding of geomorphological process-response systems ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Active layer thickness Arctic Climate change Fennoscandia Ice Iceland permafrost Svalbard wedge* University of Sussex: Figshare Arctic Svalbard
institution Open Polar
collection University of Sussex: Figshare
op_collection_id ftunivsussexfig
language unknown
topic Uncategorised value
spellingShingle Uncategorised value
Charles Harris
Lukas U Arenson
Hanne H Christiansen
Julian Murton
Permafrost and climate in Europe: Monitoring and modelling thermal, geomorphological and geotechnical responses
topic_facet Uncategorised value
description We present a review of the changing state of European permafrost within a spatial zone that includes the continuous high latitude arctic permafrost of Svalbard and the discontinuous high altitude mountain permafrost of Iceland, Fennoscandia and the Alps. The paper focuses on methodological developments and data collection over the last decade or so, including research associated with the continent-scale network of instrumented permafrost boreholes established between 1998 and 2001 under the European Union PACE project. Data indicate recent warming trends, with greatest warming at higher latitudes. Equally important are the impacts of shorter-term extreme climatic events, most immediately reflected in changes in active layer thickness. A large number of complex variables, including altitude, topography, insolation and snow distribution, determine permafrost temperatures. The development of regionally calibrated empirical-statistical models, and physically based process-oriented models, is described, and it is shown that, though more complex and data dependent, process-oriented approaches are better suited to estimating transient effects of climate change in complex mountain topography. Mapping and characterisation of permafrost depth and distribution requires integrated multiple geophysical approaches and recent advances are discussed. We report on recent research into ground ice formation, including ice segregation within bedrock and vein ice formation within ice wedge systems. The potential impacts of climate change on rock weathering, permafrost creep, landslides, rock falls, debris flows and slow mass movements are also discussed. Recent engineering responses to the potentially damaging effects of climate warming are outlined, and risk assessment strategies to minimise geological hazards are described. We conclude that forecasting changes in hazard occurrence, magnitude and frequency is likely to depend on process-based modelling, demanding improved understanding of geomorphological process-response systems ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Charles Harris
Lukas U Arenson
Hanne H Christiansen
Julian Murton
author_facet Charles Harris
Lukas U Arenson
Hanne H Christiansen
Julian Murton
author_sort Charles Harris
title Permafrost and climate in Europe: Monitoring and modelling thermal, geomorphological and geotechnical responses
title_short Permafrost and climate in Europe: Monitoring and modelling thermal, geomorphological and geotechnical responses
title_full Permafrost and climate in Europe: Monitoring and modelling thermal, geomorphological and geotechnical responses
title_fullStr Permafrost and climate in Europe: Monitoring and modelling thermal, geomorphological and geotechnical responses
title_full_unstemmed Permafrost and climate in Europe: Monitoring and modelling thermal, geomorphological and geotechnical responses
title_sort permafrost and climate in europe: monitoring and modelling thermal, geomorphological and geotechnical responses
publishDate 2009
url https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Permafrost_and_climate_in_Europe_Monitoring_and_modelling_thermal_geomorphological_and_geotechnical_responses/23321534
geographic Arctic
Svalbard
geographic_facet Arctic
Svalbard
genre Active layer thickness
Arctic
Climate change
Fennoscandia
Ice
Iceland
permafrost
Svalbard
wedge*
genre_facet Active layer thickness
Arctic
Climate change
Fennoscandia
Ice
Iceland
permafrost
Svalbard
wedge*
op_relation 10779/uos.23321534.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Permafrost_and_climate_in_Europe_Monitoring_and_modelling_thermal_geomorphological_and_geotechnical_responses/23321534
op_rights Copyright not evaluated
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