Soil and permafrost in the Ross Sea Region of Antarctica: Stable or dynamic?
Authors
Loading...
Permanent Link
Publisher link
Rights
This article is published under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonComercial-NonDerivs 3.0 Unported license (legal text).
Abstract
Soils in the Ross Sea Region of Antarctica generally comprise a surface desert pavement and a seasonally thawed active layer over permafrost. Most soils are formed on regolith such as glacial till or colluvium. Mean annual air temperatures range from -18°C to -24°C with low precipitation. The active layer ranges in depth from minimal in higher altitude, colder sites, to near 1 m deep at warmer coastal sites in the northern part of the region. Underlying permafrost may be ice-cemented, or dry with no ice cement. In some areas ice-cored moraine occurs where there is a large body of ice within the subsoil permafrost. Two examples of active gully/fan -forming events, one at Cape Evans and one at Lake Vanda are described. At the Cape Evans event water from a small lake thawed and came into contact with the ice in the underlying patterned ground ice-wedge causing the ice-wedge to melt and extensive gully erosion to occur. A fan-building event near Lake Vanda in the Wright Valley resulted in erosive and depositional features covering a horizontal distance of about 3 km and an altitudinal range of about 1400 m. Such occasional events, can be attributed to warmer than average summers, and were first described in the Ross Sea Region in the 1970s. The Cape Evans and Lake Vanda events are examples of active, rapid, landscape processes and show that landscapes are not as static as is often assumed.
Citation
Balks, M. R., & O’Neill, T. A. (2016). Soil and permafrost in the Ross Sea Region of Antarctica: Stable or dynamic? Cuadernos De Investigacion Geografica, 42(2). http://doi.org/10.18172/cig.2923
Type
Series name
Date
Publisher
Universidad de La Rioja