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Creators/Authors contains: "Nelson, Frederick E."

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  1. Abstract Despite strong terrain influences on the climate of the Appalachian Highlands in the eastern USA, few attempts have been made to systematically collect air and soil temperature data from summits and other high-elevation sites in this region. This paper reports on the Appalachian Highlands Environmental Monitoring (AHEM) mesoscale climate network, a series of 20 high-elevation sites recording temperature at hourly intervals from 1996 to 2008 on Appalachian summits along a 1500 km transect extending from Maine to North Carolina. Observations included air temperature, ground surface temperature, and soil temperature at 25 cm depth. Data were analyzed with respect to four issues: (1) accuracy of air temperature estimates and comparisons with previous studies; (2) relations between the altitude of the 0 °C mean annual air temperature and latitudinal position; (3) variations in frequency distributions of freeze–thaw days with latitude; and (4) the accuracy of an existing soil temperature classification scheme in the Appalachians. Analytic results include: (1) topographically informed interpolation techniques provide more accurate temperature estimates than traditional methods; (2) the elevation of the 0 °C mean annual air temperature decreases systematically with increasing latitude; (3) the frequency distributions of freeze–thaw days are related directly to latitudinal position; (4) classifications of mean annual soil temperature based on data from the 25 cm level are in general agreement with an existing U.S. Department of Agriculture soil-temperature map suggesting permafrost underlying high-elevation locations in the northern Appalachian Highlands.. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available April 1, 2026
  2. Traditional Iñupiaq sigḷuaq are cellars excavated into permafrost for storage of large quantities of game, fish, and other foodstuffs harvested for subsistence. Permafrost provides both a cultural and regulatory ecosystem service to Arctic peoples. A cellar thermal monitoring program in Utqiaġvik (formerly Barrow), Alaska, documented catastrophic flooding, collapses, and other issues in these cellars related to warming climatic conditions, community functions, and development. This paper provides an update on the Utqiaġvik monitoring program, which was operational from 2005 to 2019. All five monitored cellars exhibited stable to warming mean annual internal temperatures over the period of observation. Two cellars flooded, another was abandoned because of sloughing walls, and two were functioning until the COVID-19 pandemic. Based on experiences gained from the 14-year Utqiaġvik monitoring program, we conduct a vulnerability assessment using the source-pathway-receptor-consequence (SPRC) model and identify several vulnerability reduction measures. We recommend the SPRC model to aid evaluation of specific vulnerabilities of cellars and other traditional frozen infrastructure, and to improve future monitoring methods and products through increased community participation. Any attempt to provide data for community-resilience decisions should start with identifying and communicating process components, thereby bridging stakeholder learning and responses (their “heuristics” in the SPRC model) and science-based knowledge. 
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  3. Russian permafrost regions are unparalleled in extent, history of development, population presence, and the scale of economic activities. This special issue, «Permafrost Regions in Transition», provides a timely opportunity to (a) examine major issues associated with changing permafrost conditions in natural environments and areas of economic development; (b) present insights into new methods of permafrost investigations; and (c) describe new opportunities and risks threatening sustainable development of Arctic populations and industrial centers in Russia. The issue begins with papers focused on methods of permafrost research, followed by papers focused on examining changes in permafrost under natural conditions, and in Arctic settlements. The last two papers examine potential impacts of permafrost degradation on the Russian economy and potential health implications. 
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  4. Abstract Stephen Taber's early work on ice segregation and frost heaving was far ahead of its time. His laboratory experiments regarding ice segregation led to our current understanding of frost heave by civil and geotechnical engineers building roads and other structures in cold regions. It also laid the foundation for later process‐oriented field studies of cold‐climate geomorphic processes. Taber's 1943 regional monograph on the origin and history of perennially frozen ground in Alaska, published by the Geological Society of America, was the earliest example of regional cryostratigraphy, and pioneered the regional permafrost and Quaternary studies undertaken later by Katasonov, Popov, Mackay, Péwé, Hopkins, and others. An important dimension of Taber's Alaska work was his application of knowledge gained through laboratory experimentation to the interpretation of ground‐ice exposures in the field. While S. W. Muller is widely regarded as the “father” of permafrost studies in North America, Taber is properly viewed as the “progenitor” of cryostratigraphic studies, although he is not yet widely regarded as such. This study uses archival resources to provide historical context regarding the development of Taber's monograph, to investigate details about the review and publication process it underwent, and to explore the question of why it remains undervalued. 
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