Hillslope‐Channel Transitions and the Role of Water Tracks in a Changing Permafrost Landscape

Author:

Del Vecchio Joanmarie12ORCID,Zwieback Simon34ORCID,Rowland Joel C.5ORCID,DiBiase Roman A.67ORCID,Palucis Marisa C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth Science Dartmouth College NH Hanover USA

2. Dartmouth College Neukom Institute for Computational Science NH Hanover USA

3. Department of Geosciences University of Alaska Fairbanks AK Fairbanks USA

4. Geophysical Institute University of Alaska Fairbanks Fairbanks Alaska USA

5. Earth and Environmental Sciences Division Los Alamos National Laboratory NM Los Alamos USA

6. Department of Geosciences Pennsylvania State University PA University Park USA

7. Earth and Environmental Systems Institute Pennsylvania State University PA University Park USA

Abstract

AbstractThe Arctic is experiencing rapid climate change, and the effect on hydrologic processes and resulting geomorphic changes to hillslopes and channels is unclear because we lack quantitative models and theory for rapid changes resulting from thawing permafrost. The presence of permafrost modulates water flow and the stability of soil‐mantled slopes, implying that there should be a signature of permafrost processes, including warming‐driven disturbance, in channel network extent. To inform understanding of hillslope‐channel dynamics under changing climates, we examined soil‐mantled hillslopes within a ∼300 km2 area of the Seward Peninsula, western Alaska, where discontinuous permafrost is particularly susceptible to thaw and rapid landscape change. In this study, we pair high‐resolution topographic and satellite data to multi‐annual observations of InSAR‐derived surface displacement over a 5‐year period to quantify spatial variations in topographic change across an upland landscape. We find that neither the basin slope nor the presence of knickzones controls the magnitude of recent surface displacements within the study basin, as may be expected under conceptual models of temperate hillslope evolution. Rather, the highest displacement magnitudes tended to occur at the broad hillslope‐channel transition zone. In this study area, this zone is occupied by water tracks, which are zero‐order ecogeomorphic features that concentrate surface and subsurface flow paths. Our results suggest that water tracks, which appear to occupy hillslope positions between saturation and incision thresholds, are vulnerable to warming‐induced subsidence and incision. We hypothesize that gullying within water tracks will outpace infilling by hillslope processes, resulting in the growth of the channel network under future warming.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Earth-Surface Processes,Geophysics

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Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Permafrost extent sets drainage density in the Arctic;Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences;2024-02

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