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  1. Abstract Permafrost thaw and thermokarst development pose urgent challenges to Arctic communities, threatening infrastructure and essential services. This study examines the reciprocal impacts of permafrost degradation and infrastructure in Point Lay (Kali), Alaska, drawing on field data from ∼60 boreholes, measured and modeled ground temperature records, remote sensing analysis, and community interviews. Field campaigns from 2022–2024 reveal widespread thermokarst development and ground subsidence driven by the thaw of ice-rich permafrost. Borehole analysis confirms excess-ice contents averaging ∼40%, with syngenetic ice wedges extending over 12 m deep. Measured and modeled ground temperature data indicate a warming trend, with increasing mean annual ground temperatures and active layer thickness (ALT). Since 1949, modeled ALTs have generally deepened, with a marked shift toward consistently thicker ALTs in the 21st century. Remote sensing shows ice wedge thermokarst expanded from <5% in 1949 to >60% in developed areas by 2019, with thaw rates increasing tenfold between 1974 and 2019. In contrast, adjacent, undisturbed tundra exhibited more consistent thermokarst expansion (∼0.2% yr−1), underscoring the amplifying role of infrastructure, surface disturbance, and climate change. Community interviews reveal the lived consequences of permafrost degradation, including structural damage to homes, failing utilities, and growing dependence on alternative water and wastewater strategies. Engineering recommendations include deeper pile foundations, targeted ice wedge stabilization, aboveground utilities, enhanced snow management strategies, and improved drainage to mitigate ongoing infrastructure issues. As climate change accelerates permafrost thaw across the Arctic, this study highlights the need for integrated, community-driven adaptation strategies that blend geocryological research, engineering solutions, and local and Indigenous knowledge. 
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  2. Abstract The rate of technological innovation within aquatic sciences outpaces the collective ability of individual scientists within the field to make appropriate use of those technologies. The process of in situ lake sampling remains the primary choice to comprehensively understand an aquatic ecosystem at local scales; however, the impact of climate change on lakes necessitates the rapid advancement of understanding and the incorporation of lakes on both landscape and global scales. Three fields driving innovation within winter limnology that we address here are autonomous real‐time in situ monitoring, remote sensing, and modeling. The recent progress in low‐power in situ sensing and data telemetry allows continuous tracing of under‐ice processes in selected lakes as well as the development of global lake observational networks. Remote sensing offers consistent monitoring of numerous systems, allowing limnologists to ask certain questions across large scales. Models are advancing and historically come in different types (process‐based or statistical data‐driven), with the recent technological advancements and integration of machine learning and hybrid process‐based/statistical models. Lake ice modeling enhances our understanding of lake dynamics and allows for projections under future climate warming scenarios. To encourage the merging of technological innovation within limnological research of the less‐studied winter period, we have accumulated both essential details on the history and uses of contemporary sampling, remote sensing, and modeling techniques. We crafted 100 questions in the field of winter limnology that aim to facilitate the cross‐pollination of intensive and extensive modes of study to broaden knowledge of the winter period. 
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  3. ABSTRACT Research in geocryology is currently principally concerned with the effects of climate change on permafrost terrain. The motivations for most of the research are (1) quantification of the anticipated net emissions of CO2and CH4from warming and thaw of near‐surface permafrost and (2) mitigation of effects on infrastructure of such warming and thaw. Some of the effects, such as increases in ground temperature or active‐layer thickness, have been observed for several decades. Landforms that are sensitive to creep deformation are moving more quickly as a result, andRock Glacier Velocityis now part of the Essential Climate VariablePermafrostof the Global Climate Observing System. Other effects, for example, the occurrence of physical disturbances associated with thawing permafrost, particularly the development of thaw slumps, have noticeably increased since 2010. Still, others, such as erosion of sedimentary permafrost coasts, have accelerated. Geochemical effects in groundwater from trace elements, including contaminants, and those that issue from the release of sediment particles during mass wasting have become evident since 2020. Net release of CO2and CH4from thawing permafrost is anticipated within two decades and, worldwide, may reach emissions that are equivalent to a large industrial economy. The most immediate local concerns are for waste disposal pits that were constructed on the premise that permafrost would be an effective and permanent containment medium. This assumption is no longer valid at many contaminated sites. The role of ground ice in conditioning responses to changes in the thermal or hydrological regimes of permafrost has re‐emphasized the importance of regional conditions, particularly landscape history, when applying research results to practical problems. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 10, 2025
  4. This dataset documents the location and characteristics of 185 exotic tundra boulders found on the North Slope of Alaska, spanning observations from 1826 to 2025. These boulders—scattered across coastal tundra, estuarine margins, and barrier islands—represent a persistent but enigmatic feature of the Arctic landscape. Their lithologies, which include granite, quartzite, diabase, dolomite, chert, and gneiss, are exotic to the region and are widely interpreted to be ice-rafted debris deposited during Pleistocene highstands of the Arctic Ocean. Spatial and lithologic patterns suggest an origin in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and Mackenzie River basin, transported westward by sea ice or icebergs during glacial periods. The dataset integrates georeferenced boulder locations from early exploration accounts (e.g., Leffingwell 1919; Stefansson 1910, Franklin and Richardson 1828), mid-century field surveys (MacCarthy 1958), geologic interpretations of offshore facies and provenance (Rodeick 1979) and USGS (U.S. Geological Survey) engineering geological maps (1980s), and modern field observations from the 2000s–2020s. Boulder characteristics—such as lithology, surface striations, and faceting—are included where available. These observations contribute to understanding of likely saline permafrost distribution, Arctic coastal dynamics, sea-level history, and the paleogeography of iceberg and sea-ice transport. They also provide a rare terrestrial window into ice-rafted sedimentation processes typically studied in marine environments. All data are curated in a comma separated spreadsheet with associated metadata to support future geomorphological, paleoclimatic, and sea-level modeling studies. The complete list of references is provided below: Barnes, P.W., 1982. Marine Ice-Pushed Boulder Ridge, Beaufort Sea, Alaska. ARCTIC 35, 312–316. https://doi.org/10.14430/arctic2330 Brigham, O.K., 1985. Marine stratigraphy and aaino-acid geochronology of the Gublk Fomatlon, western Arctic Coastal Plain, Alaska. USGS Open File Report 381. Dease, P.W., Simpson, T., 1838. An Account of the Recent Arctic Discoveries by Messrs. Dease and T. Simpson. The Journal of the Royal Geographical Society of London 8, 213–225. Franklin, J., Richardson, J., 1828. Narrative of a Second Expedition to the Shores of the Polar Sea, in the Years 1825, 1826, and 1827. Carey, Lea and Carey. Gibbs, A.E., Richmond, B.M., 2009. Oblique aerial photography of the Arctic coast of Alaska, Nulavik to Demarcation Point, August 7-10, 2006. US Geological Survey. Hopkins, D.M., Hartz, R.W., 1978. Coastal morphology, coastal erosion, and barrier islands of the Beaufort Sea, Alaska. US Geological Survey,. Jorgenson, M.T., 2011. Coastal region of northern Alaska, Guidebook to permafrost and related features (No.GB 10). Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys. https://doi.org/10.14509/22762 McCarthy, G.R., 1958. Glacial Boulders on the Arctic Coast of Alaska. ARCTIC 11, 70–85. https://doi.org/10.14430/arctic3734 Naidu, A., Mowatt, T., 1992. Origin of gravels from the southern coast and continental shelf of the Beaufort Sea, Arctic Alaska, in: 1992 International Conference on Arctic Margins Proceedings Programs with Abstracts. pp. 351–356. O’Sullivan, J.B., 1961. Quaternary geology of the Arctic Coastal Plain, northern Alaska: Ames, Iowa, Iowa State University of Science and Technology, Ph.D. dissertation, 191 p., illust., maps. Iowa State University. Rawlinson, S.E., 1993. Surficial geology and morphology of the Alaskan central Arctic Coastal Plain (No. RI 93-1). Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys. https://doi.org/10.14509/2484 Reimnitz, E., Ross, R., 1979. Lag deposits of boulders in Stefansson Sound, Beaufort Sea, Alaska (No.79–1205), Open-File Report. U.S. Geological Survey,. https://doi.org/10.3133/ofr791205 Rodeick, C.A., 1979. The origin, distribution, and depositional history of gravel deposits on the Beaufort Sea Continental Shelf, Alaska (No. 79–234), Open-File Report. U.S. Geological Survey,. https://doi.org/10.3133/ofr79234 Schrader, F.C., Peters, W.J., 1904. A reconnaissance in northern Alaska across the Rocky Mountains, along Koyukuk, John, Anaktuvuk, and Colville Rivers, and the Arctic coast to Cape Lisburne, in 1901, with notes (USGS Numbered Series No. 20), Professional Paper. U.S. Geological Survey, Washington, D.C. https://doi.org/10.3133/pp20 Simpson, 1855. Observations on the western Esquimaux and the country they inhabit?: from notes taken during two years at Point Barrow | CiNii Research [WWW Document]. URL https://cir.nii.ac.jp/crid/1130000795332231552 (accessed 6.10.23). Smith, P.S., Mertie, J.B., 1930. Geology and mineral resources of northwestern Alaska. USGS Report 1. Stefansson, V., 1910. Notes from the Arctic. Am. Geogr. SOC. Bull 42, 460–1. Williams, J.R., 1983. Engineering-geologic maps of northern Alaska, Wainwright quadrangle (No. 83–457), Open-File Report. U.S. Geological Survey. https://doi.org/10.3133/ofr83458 Williams, J.R., Carter, L.D., 1984. Engineering-geologic maps of northern Alaska, Barrow quadrangle (No.84–124), Open-File Report. U.S. Geological Survey. https://doi.org/10.3133/ofr84126 Williams, R.J., 1983. Engineering-geologic maps of northern Alaska, Meade River quadrangle (No. 83–294), Open-File Report. U.S. Geological Survey. https://doi.org/10.3133/ofr83325 Wolf, S.C., Reimnitz, E., Barnes, P.W., 1985. Pleistocene and Holocene seismic stratigraphy between the Canning River and Prudhoe Bay, Beaufort Sea, Alaska. US Geological Survey,. de Koven Leffingwell, E., 1908. Flaxman Island, a Glacial Remnant. The Journal of Geology 16, 56–63. https://doi.org/10.1086/621490 de Koven Leffingwell, E., 1919. The Canning river region, northern Alaska (No. 109). US Government Printing Office. 
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  5. Ice wedges, which are ubiquitous in permafrost areas, play a significant role in the evolution of permafrost landscapes, influencing the topography and hydrology of these regions. In this paper, we combine a detailed multi-generational, interdisciplinary, and international literature review along with our own field experiences to explore the development of low-centered ice-wedge polygons and their orthogonal networks. Low-centered polygons, a type of ice-wedge polygonal ground characterized by elevated rims and lowered wet central basins, are critical indicators of permafrost conditions. The formation of these features has been subject to numerous inconsistencies and debates since their initial description in the 1800s. The development of elevated rims is attributed to different processes, such as soil bulging due to ice-wedge growth, differential frost heave, and the accumulation of vegetation and peat. The transition of low-centered polygons to flat-centered, driven by processes like peat accumulation, aggradational ice formation, and frost heave in polygon centers, has been generally overlooked. Low-centered polygons occur in deltas, on floodplains, and in drained-lake basins. There, they are often arranged in orthogonal networks that comprise a complex system. The prevailing explanation of their formation does not match with several field studies that practically remain unnoticed or ignored. By analyzing controversial subjects, such as the degradational or aggradational nature of low-centered polygons and the formation of orthogonal ice-wedge networks, this paper aims to clarify misconceptions and present a cohesive overview of lowland terrain ice-wedge dynamics. The findings emphasize the critical role of ice wedges in shaping Arctic permafrost landscapes and their vulnerability to ongoing climatic and landscape changes. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available July 1, 2026
  6. Abstract. Climate warming in the Arctic results in thawing permafrost and associated processes like thermokarst, especially in ice-rich permafrost regions. Since permafrost soils are one of the largest organic carbon reservoirs of the world, their thawing leads to the release of greenhouse gases due to increasing microbial activity with rising soil temperature, further exacerbating climate warming. To enhance the predictions of potential future impacts of permafrost thaw, a detailed assessment of changes in soil characteristics in response to thermokarst processes in permafrost landscapes is needed, which we investigated in this study in an Arctic coastal lowland. We analysed six sediment cores from the Arctic Coastal Plain of northern Alaska, each representing a different landscape feature along a gradient from upland to thermokarst lake and drained basin to thermokarst lagoon in various development stages. For the analysis, a multiproxy approach was used, including sedimentological (grain size, bulk density, ice content), biogeochemical (total organic carbon (TOC), TOC density (TOCvol), total nitrogen (TN), stable carbon isotopes (δ13C), TOC/TN ratio, mercury (Hg)), and lipid biomarker (n-alkanes, n-alkanols, and their ratios) parameters. We found that a semi-drained state of thermokarst lakes features the lowest OC content, and TOC and TN are generally higher in unfrozen deposits, hinting at a more intact state of organic matter. Indicated by the average chain length (ACL), δ13C, Paq, and Pwax, we found a stronger influence of aquatic organic matter (OM) in the OM composition in the soils covered by water compared to those not covered by water. Moreover, the results of the δ13C, TOC/TN ratio, and CPI indicate that the saline deposits contain stronger degraded OM than the deposits not influenced by saltwater. Additionally, we found positive correlations between the TOC and TOCvol and the Hg content in the deposits. The results indicate that thermokarst-influenced deposits tend to accumulate Hg during thawed periods and thus contain more Hg than the upland permafrost deposits that have not been impacted by lake formation. Our findings offer valuable insights into the dynamics of carbon storage and vulnerability to decomposition in coastal permafrost landscapes, reflecting the interplay of environmental factors, landform characteristics, and climate change impacts on Arctic permafrost environments. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available January 1, 2026
  7. This dataset provides a comprehensive, field-validated Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) dataset for Arctic lake ice classification, with a particular emphasis on under-ice water salinity. It includes in situ measurements from 104 lakes (132 measurement sites) across northern Alaska collected in May 2024, capturing data on lake ice thickness, snow depth, lake depth, and specific conductance of unfrozen water beneath the ice. These field observations are integrated with multi-season Sentinel-1 SAR imagery from early winter (January) to late winter (May), along with additional geospatial datasets such as Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (IfSAR)-derived elevation models and summer ice-off timing. The dataset enables improved differentiation of bedfast and floating ice lakes, particularly identifying lakes with brackish to saline water that were previously misclassified as bedfast ice lakes using traditional SAR-based remote sensing approaches. This resource supports research in permafrost stability, Arctic hydrology, climate change impacts, and winter water resource availability. This work was supported by grants from the U.S. National Science Foundation (OPP-2336164 and OPP-2336165) and the European Research Council project No. 951288 (Q-Arctic). Additional support was provided under a Broad Agency Announcement award from ERDC-CRREL, PE 0603119A. 
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  8. This dataset documents changes in infrastructure development and associated ice wedge thermokarst formation in Point Lay (Kali), Alaska, between 1949 and 2020. The data include vector-based Geographic Information System (GIS) layers derived from high-resolution remote sensing imagery and historical aerial photographs for three key time points: 1949, 1974, and 2019/20. Infrastructure features (e.g., roads, runways, gravel pads, and buildings) were manually digitized, and the extent of ice wedge thermokarst was mapped using detailed image interpretation techniques at 1:500 scale. The dataset supports spatial analysis of thermokarst expansion in relation to anthropogenic disturbance and surface development. Findings reveal a near tenfold increase in ice wedge thermokarst extent in developed areas between 1974 and 2019, with minimal changes in adjacent undisturbed tundra, underscoring the synergistic impact of infrastructure and climate warming on permafrost degradation. These data provide a valuable baseline for tracking permafrost-related landscape changes and informing adaptation strategies in Arctic communities experiencing thaw-related infrastructure challenges. 
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  9. Arctic shorelines are vulnerable to climate change impacts as sea level rises, permafrost thaws, storms intensify, and sea ice thins. Seventy-five years of aerial and satellite observations have established coastal erosion as an increasing Arctic hazard. However, other hazards at play—for instance, the cumulative impact that sea-level rise and permafrost thaw subsidence will have on permafrost shorelines—have received less attention, preventing assessments of these processes’ impacts compared to and combined with coastal erosion. Alaska’s Arctic Coastal Plain (ACP) is ideal for such assessments because of the high-density observations of topography, coastal retreat rates, and permafrost characteristics, and importance to Indigenous communities and oilfield infrastructure. Here, we produce 21st-century projections of Arctic shoreline position that include erosion, permafrost subsidence, and sea-level rise. Focusing on the ACP, we merge 5 m topography, satellite-derived coastal lake depth estimates, and empirical assessments of land subsidence due to permafrost thaw with projections of coastal erosion and sea-level rise for medium and high emissions scenarios from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s AR6 Report. We find that by 2100, erosion and inundation will together transform the ACP, leading to 6-8x more land loss than coastal erosion alone and disturbing 8-11x more organic carbon. Without mitigating measures, by 2100, coastal change could damage 40 to 65% of infrastructure in present-day ACP coastal villages and 10 to 20% of oilfield infrastructure. Our findings highlight the risks that compounding climate hazards pose to coastal communities and underscore the need for adaptive planning for Arctic coastlines in the 21st century. 
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