Remote sensing, regional ground temperature and ground ice observations, and numerical simulation were used to investigate the size, distribution, and activity of ice wedges in fine-grained mineral and organic soils across the forest-tundra transition in uplands east of theMackenzie Delta. In the northernmost dwarf-shrub tundra, ice wedge polygons cover up to 40% of the ground surface, with the wedges commonly exceeding 3m in width. The largest ice wedges are in peatlands where thermal contraction cracking occurs more frequently than in nearby hummocky terrain with fine-grained soils. There are fewer ice wedges, rarely exceeding 2m in width, in uplands to the south and none have been found in mineral soils of the tall-shrub tundra, although...
Movement of the substratum and thawing of perennially frozen ground are of primary importance in nor...
Ice wedge polygons (IWP) are amongst the most typical permafrost phenomena in Arctic lowlands. Withi...
Ice-wedge polygons are perhaps the most dominant permafrost related features in the Arctic landscape...
Ice wedges are common features of the subsurface in permafrost regions. They develop by repeated fro...
Aims: For informed predictions on the sensitivity of Arctic tundra landscape to permafrost thaw, we ...
Ice-wedges are common permafrost features formed over hundreds to thousands of years of repeated fro...
Annual mean ground temperatures (Tg) decline northward from approximately −3.0°C in the boreal fores...
Aims: For informed predictions on the sensitivity of Arctic tundra landscape to permafrost thaw, we ...
Ice-wedge networks underlie polygonal terrain and comprise the most widespread form of massive groun...
Ice wedge polygons are one of the most widespread and easily recognizable permafrost landforms. Dist...
Changing environmental and geomorphological conditions are resulting in vegetation change in ice-wed...
The shortage of information on snow properties in high latitudes places a major limitation on permaf...
The variation in near-surface ground-ice content of the uppermost 1m of permafrost was examined by d...
The goal of this research is to constrain the influence of ice wedge polygon microtopography on nea...
Location and climate factors governing morphological features of ice wedge polygons in arctic zone A...
Movement of the substratum and thawing of perennially frozen ground are of primary importance in nor...
Ice wedge polygons (IWP) are amongst the most typical permafrost phenomena in Arctic lowlands. Withi...
Ice-wedge polygons are perhaps the most dominant permafrost related features in the Arctic landscape...
Ice wedges are common features of the subsurface in permafrost regions. They develop by repeated fro...
Aims: For informed predictions on the sensitivity of Arctic tundra landscape to permafrost thaw, we ...
Ice-wedges are common permafrost features formed over hundreds to thousands of years of repeated fro...
Annual mean ground temperatures (Tg) decline northward from approximately −3.0°C in the boreal fores...
Aims: For informed predictions on the sensitivity of Arctic tundra landscape to permafrost thaw, we ...
Ice-wedge networks underlie polygonal terrain and comprise the most widespread form of massive groun...
Ice wedge polygons are one of the most widespread and easily recognizable permafrost landforms. Dist...
Changing environmental and geomorphological conditions are resulting in vegetation change in ice-wed...
The shortage of information on snow properties in high latitudes places a major limitation on permaf...
The variation in near-surface ground-ice content of the uppermost 1m of permafrost was examined by d...
The goal of this research is to constrain the influence of ice wedge polygon microtopography on nea...
Location and climate factors governing morphological features of ice wedge polygons in arctic zone A...
Movement of the substratum and thawing of perennially frozen ground are of primary importance in nor...
Ice wedge polygons (IWP) are amongst the most typical permafrost phenomena in Arctic lowlands. Withi...
Ice-wedge polygons are perhaps the most dominant permafrost related features in the Arctic landscape...