skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


Title: Collaborative Research: Climate controls on carbon accumulation in upland permafrost at millennial scales
Organic-rich surficial materials of the Arctic are a storehouse of frozen carbon (C) of global consequence. Climate ultimately controls the exchange of carbon between this reservoir and the atmosphere, but the long-term relation between climate and permafrost carbon is highly uncertain. This study draws from climate changes that occurred during the recent geologic past (late glacial and Holocene), which serve as natural experiments, to quantify the long-term (millennial-scale) relation between climate and the mass of carbon that accumulated under distinctly different climate states. Whereas previous studies of the effects of climate changes on permafrost carbon have generally focused on lakes and peatlands of low-lying terrain, this study provides complementary information from upland deposits that mantle hilly terrain, possibly the least-well known component of the arctic frozen organic carbon inventory. The project applies and develops new approaches to investigating the relation between climate and carbon sequestration in an understudied setting and at long time scales by bringing together expertise in Arctic paleoecology, paleoclimatology, surficial geology, geochronology and quantitative geomorphology. This paleo perspective provides a unique approach to help infer how permafrost and its C reservoir may react in the future.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
1844205
PAR ID:
10506816
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ; ; ; ;
Publisher / Repository:
NSF Arctic Data Center
Date Published:
Subject(s) / Keyword(s):
Permafrost Paleoclimate Carbon Holocene BNZ LTER
Format(s):
Medium: X
Location:
central Alaska
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Abstract This study explores the carbon stability in the Arctic permafrost following the sea‐level transgression since the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). The Arctic permafrost stores a significant amount of organic carbon sequestered as frozen particulate organic carbon, solid methane hydrate and free methane gas. Post‐LGM sea‐level transgression resulted in ocean water, which is up to 20°C warmer compared to the average annual air mass, inundating, and thawing the permafrost. This study develops a one‐dimensional multiphase flow, multicomponent transport numerical model and apply it to investigate the coupled thermal, hydraulic, microbial, and chemical processes occurring in the thawing subsea permafrost. Results show that microbial methane is produced and vented to the seawater immediately upon the flooding of the Arctic continental shelves. This microbial methane is generated by the biodegradation of the previously frozen organic carbon. The maximum seabed methane flux is predicted in the shallow water where the sediment has been warmed up, but the remaining amount of organic carbon is still high. It is less likely to cause seabed methane emission by methane hydrate dissociation. Such a situation only happens when there is a very shallow (∼200 m depth) intra‐permafrost methane hydrate, the occurrence of which is limited. This study provides insights into the limits of methane release from the ongoing flooding of the Arctic permafrost, which is critical to understand the role of the Arctic permafrost in the carbon cycle, ocean chemistry and climate change. 
    more » « less
  2. Lakes are abundant features on coastal plains of the Arctic, providing important fish and wildlife habitat and water supply for villages and industry, but also interact with frozen ground (permafrost) and the carbon it stores. Most of these lakes are termed "thermokarst" because they form in ice-rich permafrost and gradually expand over time. The dynamic nature of thermokarst lakes also makes them prone to catastrophic drainage and abrupt conversion to wetlands, called drained thermokarst lake basins (DTLBs). Together, thermokarst lakes and DTLBs cover up to 80% of arctic lowland regions, making understanding their response to ongoing climate change essential for coastal plain environmental assessment. Dating the timing of lake drainage can improve our understanding of the causes and consequences of DTLB formation. This suite of 14C (Carbon-14) ages provides insight into the timing of lake drainage on the North Slope of Alaska across a range of ecosystems and surficial geology types. 
    more » « less
  3. Lakes are abundant features on coastal plains of the Arctic, providing important fish and wildlife habitat and water supply for villages and industry, but also interact with frozen ground (permafrost) and the carbon it stores. Most of these lakes are termed "thermokarst" because they form in ice-rich permafrost and gradually expand over time. The dynamic nature of thermokarst lakes also makes them prone to catastrophic drainage and abrupt conversion to wetlands, called drained thermokarst lake basins (DTLBs). Together, thermokarst lakes and DTLBs cover up to 80% of arctic lowland regions, making understanding their response to ongoing climate change essential for coastal plain environmental assessment. Dating the timing of lake drainage can improve our understanding of the causes and consequences of DTLB formation. This suite of 14C (Carbon-14) ages provides insight into the timing of lake drainage on the North Slope of Alaska across a range of ecosystems and surficial geology types. 
    more » « less
  4. The carbon stored in permafrost deposits represents the single largest soil carbon reservoir on Earth. Concerns about the instability and dynamics of this carbon reservoir during permafrost thaw associated with polar amplification of climate warming contribute a large part of the uncertainty in forecasting future climate. We have been studying the carbon dynamics of permafrost deposits contained in the floodplains of large Arctic rivers. Across Arctic floodplains, accelerating bank erosion can liberate permafrost organic carbon (OC) as carbon dioxide (CO2) or methane (CH4), and/or redeposit it in fluvial units. These different fates have very different implications for climate feedback. Determining OC stocks and their dynamics in Arctic floodplain cutbanks and point bars, as well as the OC load in fluvial transport, is essential to better understand the recycling and export of permafrost carbon. As part of a National Science Foundation (NSF) funded project to better understand the effects of erosion in the Yukon River Basin, floodplain sediments were collected between June and September 2022 at two locations underlain by discontinuous permafrost within the Yukon River Basin in Alaska: Beaver (65.700° North (N), 156.387° West (W)) and Huslia (66.362° N, 147.398° W). This dataset mainly reports OC contents for collected subsurface sediments in floodplains measured by elemental analyzer. The coupled mercury content can be found in Isabel et al., 2024 (https://doi.org/10.18739/A2RF5KH5J). 
    more » « less
  5. Long-term permafrost observatories are needed to document and monitor rapid changes to ice-rich permafrost systems (IRPS) in a variety of geological, climatic, and infrastructure settings. As part of the US National Science Foundation’s Navigating the New Arctic (NNA) Program, a new observatory was established near the Deadhorse Airport in the eastern part of the Prudhoe Bay Oilfield (PBO) in 2020–23. The NNA-IRPS project has three main research themes: (1) evolution of and degradation of ground ice within the major surficial-geology units; (2) rapid changes in permafrost, landforms, and vegetation due to infrastructure and climate change; and (3) ecological landscapes associated with the calcareous fluvial deposits of the Central Arctic Coastal Plain. 
    more » « less