Pan-Antarctic map of near-surface permafrost temperatures at 1 km<sup>2</sup> scale
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Published:2020-02-07
Issue:2
Volume:14
Page:497-519
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ISSN:1994-0424
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Container-title:The Cryosphere
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language:en
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Short-container-title:The Cryosphere
Author:
Obu JaroslavORCID, Westermann Sebastian, Vieira GonçaloORCID, Abramov Andrey, Balks Megan Ruby, Bartsch AnnettORCID, Hrbáček Filip, Kääb AndreasORCID, Ramos MiguelORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Permafrost is present within almost all of the Antarctic's ice-free areas,
but little is known about spatial variations in permafrost temperatures
except for a few areas with established ground temperature measurements. We
modelled a temperature at the top of the permafrost (TTOP) for all the
ice-free areas of the Antarctic mainland and Antarctic islands at 1 km2
resolution during 2000–2017. The model was driven by remotely sensed land
surface temperatures and downscaled ERA-Interim climate reanalysis data, and
subgrid permafrost variability was simulated by variable snow cover. The
results were validated against in situ-measured ground temperatures from 40
permafrost boreholes, and the resulting root-mean-square error was
1.9 ∘C. The lowest near-surface permafrost temperature of
−36 ∘C was modelled at Mount Markham in the Queen Elizabeth Range in
the Transantarctic Mountains. This is the lowest permafrost temperature on
Earth, according to global-scale modelling results. The temperatures were
most commonly modelled between −23 and −18 ∘C for mountainous
areas rising above the Antarctic Ice Sheet and between −14 and −8 ∘C for coastal areas. The model performance was good where snow
conditions were modelled realistically, but errors of up to 4 ∘C
occurred at sites with strong wind-driven redistribution of snow.
Funder
European Space Agency
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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