Disparate permafrost terrain changes after a large flood observed from space

Author:

Zwieback Simon12ORCID,McClernan Mark3,Kanevskiy Mikhail4ORCID,Jorgenson Mark T.5,Walker Donald A.6,Chang Qianyu7,Bergstedt Helena8,Toniolo Horacio4,Romanovsky Vladimir E.12,Meyer Franz J.12

Affiliation:

1. Geophysical Institute University of Alaska Fairbanks AK USA

2. Department of Geosciences University of Alaska Fairbanks AK USA

3. United States Geological Survey ‐ Astrogeology Science Center Flagstaff AZ USA

4. Institute of Northern Engineering University of Alaska Fairbanks AK USA

5. Alaska Ecoscience AK USA

6. Institute of Arctic Biology University of Alaska AK USA

7. Department of Geography University of Guelph ON Canada

8. b.geos Lower Austria Austria

Abstract

AbstractThe 2015 spring flood of the Sagavanirktok River inundated large swaths of tundra as well as infrastructure near Prudhoe Bay, Alaska. Its lasting impact on permafrost, vegetation, and hydrology is unknown but compels attention in light of changing Arctic flood regimes. We combined InSAR and optical satellite observations to quantify subdecadal permafrost terrain changes and identify their controls. While the flood locally induced quasi‐instantaneous ice‐wedge melt, much larger areas were characterized by subtle, spatially variable post‐flood changes. Surface deformation from 2015 to 2019 estimated from ALOS‐2 and Sentinel‐1 InSAR varied substantially within and across terrain units, with greater subsidence on average in flooded locations. Subsidence exceeding 5 cm was locally observed in inundated ice‐rich units and also in inactive floodplains. Overall, subsidence increased with deposit age and thus ground ice content, but many flooded ice‐rich units remained stable, indicating variable drivers of deformation. On average, subsiding ice‐rich locations showed increases in observed greenness and wetness. Conversely, many ice‐poor floodplains greened without deforming. Ice wedge degradation in flooded locations with elevated subsidence was mostly of limited intensity, and the observed subsidence largely stopped within 2 years. Based on remote sensing and limited field observations, we propose that the disparate subdecadal changes were influenced by spatially variable drivers (e.g., sediment deposition, organic layer), controls (ground ice and its degree of protection), and feedback processes. Remote sensing helps quantify the heterogeneous interactions between permafrost, vegetation, and hydrology across permafrost‐affected fluvial landscapes. Interdisciplinary monitoring is needed to improve predictions of landscape dynamics and to constrain sediment, nutrient, and carbon budgets.

Funder

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Directorate for Biological Sciences

National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Earth-Surface Processes

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