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Integrating local environmental observations and remote sensing to better understand the life cycle of a thermokarst lake in Arctic Alaska
被引:3
|作者:
Jones, Benjamin M.
[1
]
Tessier, Susan Schaeffer
[2
]
Tessier, Tim
[2
]
Brubaker, Michael
[3
]
Brook, Mike
[3
]
Schaeffer, Jackie
[3
]
Jones, Melissa K. Ward K.
[1
]
Grosse, Guido
[4
]
Nitze, Ingmar
[4
]
Rettelbach, Tabea
[4
]
Zavoico, Sebastian
[5
,6
]
Clark, Jason A.
[5
]
Tape, Ken D.
[5
]
机构:
[1] Univ Alaska Fairbanks, Inst Northern Engn, 1764 Tanana Loop Rd, Fairbanks, AK 99775 USA
[2] Local Environm Observer, Kotzebue, AK USA
[3] Alaska Native Tribal Hlth Consortium, Community Environm & Hlth, Anchorage, AK USA
[4] Alfred Wegener Inst, Helmholtz Ctr Polar & Marine Res, Potsdam, Germany
[5] Univ Alaska Fairbanks, Geophys Inst, Fairbanks, AK 99775 USA
[6] Univ Alaska Fairbanks, Alaska Cooperat Fish & Wildlife Res Unit, Fairbanks, AK 99775 USA
基金:
美国国家科学基金会;
欧盟地平线“2020”;
关键词:
Arctic;
lakes;
lake drainage;
local observations;
permafrost;
thermokarst;
NORTHWESTERN ALASKA;
DRAINAGE EVENTS;
COASTAL-PLAIN;
PERMAFROST;
WATER;
TRANSITIONS;
EVOLUTION;
LOWLANDS;
NUNAVUT;
TERRAIN;
D O I:
10.1080/15230430.2023.2195518
中图分类号:
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号:
08 ;
0830 ;
摘要:
On 29 June 2022, local observers reported the drainage of a 0.5 ha lake near Qikiqtagruk (Kotzebue), Alaska, that prompted this collaborative study on the life cycle of a thermokarst lake in the Arctic. Prior to its drainage, the lake expanded from 0.13 ha in 1951 to 0.54 ha in 2021 at lateral rates that ranged from 0.25 to 0.35 m/year. During the drainage event, we estimate that 18,500 m(3) of water drained from the lake into Kotzebue Sound, forming a 125-m-long thermo-erosional gully that incised 2 to 14 m in ice-rich permafrost. Between 29 June and 18 August 2022, the drainage gully expanded from 1 m to >10 m wide, mobilizing similar to 8,500 m(3) of material through erosion and thaw. By reconstructing a pre-lake disturbance terrain model, we show that thaw subsidence occurs rapidly (0.78 m/year) upon transition from tundra to lake but that over a seventy-year period it slows to 0.12 m/year. The combination of multiple remote sensing tools and local environmental observations provided a rich data set that allowed us to assess rates of lake expansion relative to rates of sub-lake permafrost thaw subsidence as well as hypothesizing about the potential role of beavers in arctic lake drainage.
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