TechAlaska's vanishing permafrost threatens to accelerate climate change

Alaska's vanishing permafrost threatens to accelerate climate change

Alaska - landscape
Alaska - landscape
Images source: © Getty Images | Cappan

11 August 2024 13:52

American scientists are raising the alarm due to changes observed in Alaska. These phenomena are related to global warming. Research indicates that the frozen ground in Alaska is eroding at an increasing rate, preventing natural regeneration.

Professor Nathan D. Brown, author of the publication in "AGU Advances" magazine, explains: "In the Northern Hemisphere, much of the ground is permafrost, meaning it is frozen year-round. Permafrost is a delicate natural resource. If it is lost faster than it is regenerated, we endanger infrastructure and release carbon, which can warm the atmosphere."

Rivers play a key role in maintaining the balance of this resource. In Alaska, the land along the riverbanks often consists of permafrost—a mixture of soil, gravel, and sand, often bound together by ice.

Soil erosion in Alaska

A team of Texas researchers, in collaboration with experts from other universities, conducted detailed studies better to understand the characteristics of the region's permafrost. They mapped and determined the age of floodplain deposits estimated permafrost extent and characterised the vegetation along the Koyukuk River in Alaska, a tributary of the Yukon River stretching for more than 500 miles.

Based on the collected data, they created a model of the changes occurring in permafrost alongside the changing air temperatures. Although new permafrost forms along the river's floodplain, it does not form quickly enough to replace what is disappearing due to rising temperatures.

The rate of permafrost renewal

The main question in warming climate conditions is: will Arctic rivers cause the erosion of permafrost on thawing banks faster than permafrost can renew? "By dating these permafrost deposits, we found that permafrost formation in this region can take thousands of years," explains Dr Brown.

The scientist warns that the process of forming permafrost will likely take longer in warming climate conditions. Thawing riverbanks of permafrost will become more susceptible to erosion. The ultimate result will be the loss of permafrost and the release of carbon into the atmosphere.

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