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  1. ### Access Photos of ~50 permaforst boreholes and associated cores can be accessed and downloaded from the 'AR\_Fire\_Core_Photos' directory via: [https://arcticdata.io/data/10.18739/A2251FM9P/](https://arcticdata.io/data/10.18739/A2251FM9P/) ### Overview The Anaktuvuk River tundra fire burned more than 1,000 square kilometers of permafrost-affected arctic tundra in northern Alaska in 2007. The fire is the largest historical recorded tundra fire on the North Slope of Alaska. Fifty percent of the burn area is underlain by Yedoma permafrost that is characterized by extremely high ground-ice content of organic-rich, silty buried soils and the occurrence of large, syngenetic polygonal ice wedges. Given the high ground-ice content of this terrain, Yedoma is thought to be among the most vulnerable to fire-induced thermokarst in the Arctic. With this dataset, we update observations on near-surface permafrost in the Anaktuvuk River tundra fire burn area from 2009 to 2023 using repeat airborne LiDAR-derived elevation data, ground temperature measurements, and cryostratigraphic studies. We have provided all of the data that has gone into an analysis and resulting paper that has been submitted for peer review at the journal Scientific Reports. The datasets include: - 1 m spatial resolution airborne LiDAR-derived digital terrain models from the summers of 2009, 2014, and 2021. - The area in which thaw subsidence was detected in the multi-temporal LiDAR data using the Geomorphic Change Detection software. - A terrain unit map developed for the 50 square kilometer study area. - Ground temperature time series measurements for a logger located in the burned area and a logger located in an unburned area. The ground temperature data consist of daily mean measurements at a depth of 0.15 m (active layer) and 1.00 m (permafrost) from July 2009 to August 2023. - Photos ~50 permafrost boreholes and the associated cores collected there. - A borehole log and notes pdf also accompanies our studies on the cryostratigraphy of permafrost post-fire and our observations on the recovery of permafrost. 
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  2. We studied processes of ice-wedge degradation and stabilization at three sites adjacent to road infrastructure in the Prudhoe Bay Oilfield, Alaska, USA. We examined climatic, environmental, and subsurface conditions and evaluated vulnerability of ice wedges to thermokarst in undisturbed and road-affected areas. Vulnerability of ice wedges strongly depends on the structure and thickness of soil layers above ice wedges, including the active, transient, and intermediate layers. In comparison with the undisturbed area, sites adjacent to the roads had smaller average thicknesses of the protective intermediate layer (4 cm vs. 9 cm), and this layer was absent above almost 60% of ice wedges (vs. ∼45% in undisturbed areas). Despite the strong influence of infrastructure, ice-wedge degradation is a reversible process. Deepening of troughs during ice-wedge degradation leads to a substantial increase in mean annual ground temperatures but not in thaw depths. Thus, stabilization of ice wedges in the areas of cold continuous permafrost can occur despite accumulation of snow and water in the troughs. Although thermokarst is usually more severe in flooded areas, higher plant productivity, more litter, and mineral material (including road dust) accumulating in the troughs contribute to formation of the intermediate layer, which protects ice wedges from further melting. 
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  3. null (Ed.)
    Very high spatial resolution commercial satellite imagery can inform observation, mapping, and documentation of micro-topographic transitions across large tundra regions. The bridging of fine-scale field studies with pan-Arctic system assessments has until now been constrained by a lack of overlap in spatial resolution and geographical coverage. This likely introduced biases in climate impacts on, and feedback from the Arctic region to the global climate system. The central objective of this exploratory study is to develop an object-based image analysis workflow to automatically extract ice-wedge polygon troughs from very high spatial resolution commercial satellite imagery. We employed a systematic experiment to understand the degree of interoperability of knowledge-based workflows across distinct tundra vegetation units—sedge tundra and tussock tundra—focusing on the same semantic class. In our multi-scale trough modelling workflow, we coupled mathematical morphological filtering with a segmentation process to enhance the quality of image object candidates and classification accuracies. Employment of the master ruleset on sedge tundra reported classification accuracies of correctness of 0.99, completeness of 0.87, and F1 score of 0.92. When the master ruleset was applied to tussock tundra without any adaptations, classification accuracies remained promising while reporting correctness of 0.87, completeness of 0.77, and an F1 score of 0.81. Overall, results suggest that the object-based image analysis-based trough modelling workflow exhibits substantial interoperability across the terrain while producing promising classification accuracies. From an Arctic earth science perspective, the mapped troughs combined with the ArcticDEM can allow hydrological assessments of lateral connectivity of the rapidly changing Arctic tundra landscape, and repeated mapping can allow us to track fine-scale changes across large regions and that has potentially major implications on larger riverine systems. 
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  4. Abstract

    Riverbank erosion in yedoma regions strongly affects landscape evolution, biogeochemical cycling, sediment transport, and organic and nutrient fluxes to the Arctic Ocean. Since 2006, we have studied the 35‐m‐high Itkillik River yedoma bluff in northern Alaska, whose retreat rate during 1995–2010 was up to 19 m/yr, which is among the highest rates worldwide. This study extends our previous observations of bluff evolution and shows that average bluff‐top retreat rates decreased from 8.7–10.0 m/yr during 2011–2014 to 4.5–5.8 m/yr during 2015–2019, and bluff‐base retreat rates for the same time period decreased from 4.7–7.5 m/yr to 1.3–1.7 m/yr, correspondingly. Bluff evolution initially involves rapid fluvio‐thermal erosion at the base and block collapse, following by slowdown in river erosion and continuing thermal denudation of the retreating headwall with formation of baydzherakhs. Eventually, input of sediment and water from the headwall diminishes, vegetation develops, and slope gradually stabilizes. The step change in the fluvial–geomorphic system has resulted in a 60% decline in the volumetric mobilization of sediment and organic carbon between 2011 and 2019. Our findings stress the importance of sustained observations at key permafrost region study sites to elucidate critical information related to past and potential landscape evolution in the Arctic.

     
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