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This dataset describes measurements of inter-annual to sub-seasonal riverbank erosion rates on the Koyukuk River, Alaska, over the period 2016-2022. The data are used in the paper: “Geyman, E., Douglas, M., Avouac, J.-P. and Lamb, M. Permafrost slows Arctic riverbank erosion, in review (2024).” The dataset contains two sets of measurements: (1) riverbank displacement estimated from Sentinel-2 optical satellite imagery (10 meter (m) resolution) over the period 30-Aug-2016 to 13-Jul-2022, and (2) riverbank displacement estimated from Planet optical satellite imagery (3 m resolution) over the period 31-Aug-2016 to 01-Oct-2022. The first dataset is based on comparison of Sentinel-2 satellite acquisitions from the start and end of the study interval. The second dataset analyzes 65 PlanetScope image mosaics (for an average of 9 observations per year). The Matlab code used to analyze the Sentinel-2 and PlanetScope imagery, as well as to process the sub-seasonal displacement estimates, is included in the file “Code.zip”.more » « less
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Abstract Permafrost influences 25% of land in the Northern Hemisphere, where it stabilizes the ground beneath communities and infrastructure and sequesters carbon. However, the coevolution of permafrost, river dynamics, and vegetation in Arctic environments remains poorly understood. As rivers meander, they erode the floodplain at cutbanks and build new land through bar deposition, creating sequences of landforms with distinct formation ages. Here we mapped these sequences along the Koyukuk River floodplain, Alaska, analyzing permafrost occurrence, and landform and vegetation types. We used radiocarbon and optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating to develop a floodplain age map. Deposit ages ranged from modern to 10 ka, with more younger deposits near the modern channel. Permafrost rapidly reached 50% areal extent in all deposits older than 200 years then gradually increased up to ∼85% extent for deposits greater than 4 Kyr old. Permafrost extent correlated with increases in black spruce and wetland abundance, as well as increases in permafrost extent within wetland, and shrub and scrub vegetation classes. We developed an inverse model to constrain permafrost formation rate as a function of air temperature. Permafrost extent initially increased by ∼25% per century, in pace with vegetation succession, before decelerating to <10% per millennia as insulating overbank mud and moss slowly accumulated. Modern permafrost extent on the Koyukuk floodplain therefore reflects a dynamic balance between widespread, time‐varying permafrost formation and rapid, localized degradation due to cutbank erosion that might trigger a rapid loss of permafrost with climatic warming.more » « less
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This dataset describes measurements of river migration rates (averaged over the period 2016-2022) in three locations within the Yukon River Watershed: Huslia, Alaska (AK) (65.700 N, 156.387 W), Beaver, AK (66.362 N, 147.398 W), and Alakanuk, AK (62.685 N, 164.644 W). Huslia is located on the Koyukuk River and Beaver and Alakanuk are located on the Yukon River. The river migration rates are quantified from sub-pixel correlation of optical satellite imagery (Sentinel-2 imagery, 10 meter (m) spatial resolution), following the methodology of Geyman et al. (2024). The methodology allows for the detection of riverbank erosion at scales approximately 5-10 times smaller than the pixel size, so the detection threshold is 1-2 m over the approximately 7-year interval, corresponding to a migration rate of 0.1 to 0.3 m/year. The motion of the eroding and accreting sides of the river are quantified separately. The river migration rate datasets are made available as georeferenced shapefiles.more » « less
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This document describes geomorphic relative age mapping and radiocarbon (14C) measurements used to construct floodplain age models for three locations within the Yukon River Watershed: Huslia, Alaska (65.700 N, 156.387 W), Alakanuk, Alaska (62.685 N, 164.644 W), and Beaver, Alaska (66.362 N, 147.398 W). We describe the field sampling protocols, geomorphic mapping of cross-cutting relationships (aided by digital elevation models (DEMs) and high-resolution satellite imagery), 14C and optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) lab analyses, Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) interpolation through the geomorphic–radiogenic age constraints, and the resulting floodplain terrain age models.more » « less
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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
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This dataset contains supporting files detailing five frozen flume experiments conducted at the Caltech Earth Surface Dynamics Laboratory to investigate rates of ablation-limited permafrost riverbank erosion under controlled conditions. Water flowed past a bank of saturated, frozen sand and ice and gradually eroded the bank by thawing pore ice and immediately entraining sand and washing it downstream. Experiments were scaled for flow hydraulics and heat transfer allowing comparisons between our results and natural permafrost riverbanks. For each experiment, we measured the initial and final sand bank topography using a Keyence laser scanner, water surface slope at 3-min intervals throughout the experiment using a Massa sonar scanner, bank erosion using 10-sec overhead timelapse imagery taken by an overhead camera, water and bank temperature using thermistors frozen into the sand bank and sampling at 2 Hz, and water discharge using an in-line flow meter. We include calibration data for the carriage (engineered by the Saint Anthony Falls Laboratory) used to make sonar and laser topography measurements. We also include calibration data for temperature sensors, water discharge measurements, and images of a regular grid placed in the flume to align overhead camera images with the carriage datum. Grain size analysis for the channel bed (gravel) was produced using a pebble count and bank sand was measured using a Camsizer X2. In addition to the five frozen experiments, we include sonar scans of water surface slope and Keyence scans of bed and bank topography for calibration experiments ran with an immobile gravel bank and bed.more » « less
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Due to atmospheric circulation and preservation of organic matter, large amounts of mercury (Hg) are stored in permafrost regions. Due to rapid warming and thawing permafrost in the Arctic, this Hg may be released, potentially degrading water quality and impacting human health. River bank erosion in particular has the ability to quickly mobilize large amounts of Hg-rich floodplain sediments. 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: Beaver, Alaska (AK) (65.700 N, 156.387 W) and Huslia, AK (66.362N, 147.398 W). This dataset contains mercury contents for collected floodplain sediments measured by direct thermal decomposition. Sample metadata also includes information recorded in the field (location, visual grain size description, and sample collection depth) and collected post sample processing (water content and dry density).more » « less
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Abstract How will bank erosion rates in Arctic rivers respond to a warming climate? Existing physical models predict that bank erosion rates should increase with water temperature as permafrost thaws more rapidly. However, the same theory predicts much faster erosion than is typically observed. We propose that these models are missing a key component: a layer of thawed sediment on the bank that buffers heat transfer and slows erosion. We developed a 1D model for this thawed layer, which reveals three regimes for permafrost riverbank erosion. Thaw‐limited erosion occurs in the absence of a thawed layer, such that rapid pore‐ice melting sets the pace of erosion, consistent with existing models. Entrainment‐limited erosion occurs when pore‐ice melting outpaces bank erosion, resulting in a thawed layer, and the relatively slow entrainment of sediment sets the pace of erosion similar to non‐permafrost rivers. Third, the intermediate regime occurs when the thawed layer goes through cycles of thickening and failure, leading to a transient thermal buffer that slows thaw rates. Distinguishing between these regimes is important because thaw‐limited erosion is highly sensitive to water temperature, whereas entrainment‐limited erosion is not. Interestingly, the buffered regime produces a thawed layer and relatively slow erosion rates like the entrainment‐limited regime, but erosion rates are temperature sensitive like the thaw‐limited regime. The results suggest the potential for accelerating erosion in a warming Arctic where bank erosion is presently thaw‐limited or buffered. Moreover, rivers can experience all regimes annually and transition between regimes with warming, altering their sensitivity to climate change.more » « less
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This dataset includes field measurements of above-ground biomass made between May and October, 2023 in three locations within the Yukon River Watershed: Huslia, Alaska(AK) (65.700 N, 156.387W), Beaver, AK (66.362 N, 147.398W), and Alakanuk, AK (62.685N, 164.644W). We measured a total of 11,335 trees, distributed in 190 field plots (approximately 10 meter (m) x 10 m). We apply allometric scaling relations to convert measurements of tree diameter to kilograms of dry biomass. We then link these filed measurements of above-ground biomass density to the mean forest canopy height (MCH), derived from airborne Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) data. We derive empirical regressions linking MCH to above-ground biomass in each of the field sites, and then apply these empirical relationships to the LiDAR datasets to obtain maps of above-ground biomass density. This dataset includes both the field observations (coordinates, tree type, and tree diameter of the 11,335 inventoried trees) and the processed above-ground biomass maps (georeferenced TIFF files, with a spatial resolution of 10 m).more » « less
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