TECHNICAL PAPERS
Mar 1, 1990

Climatic Change and Permafrost: Record from Surficial Deposits

Publication: Journal of Cold Regions Engineering
Volume 4, Issue 1

Abstract

The physical and chemical characteristics of surficial deposits and the floral and faunal remains they contain provide information that is useful for interpreting both paleoclimate and past permafrost conditions. Surficial deposits thus provide a record of climatic change and permafrost history. This record suggests that initiation of permafrost in lowland areas of the Southern Arctic Archipelago and continents of the northern hemisphere may have occurred about 2,400,000 years ago during the pronounced cooling that led to the first major glaciation of late Cenozoic time. Since then, climate has been relatively cold but cyclically variable, characterized by the growth and shrinkage of large, continental ice sheets. Permafrost has expanded and contracted in response to these climatic changes, and we can expect the present permafrost conditions to change in response to future climatic changes. To predict the response of permafrost and the landscape to future climatic change we should: (1) Define relations between climate and the modern landscape; (2) establish long‐term records of past climatic change and landscape response; and (3) determine the paleoenvironments of past warm periods as possible analogs for future global warming.

Get full access to this article

View all available purchase options and get full access to this article.

References

1.
Berger, A. L. (1978). “Long‐term variations of caloric insolation resulting from the earth's orbital elements.” Quaternary Res., 9, 139–167.
2.
Brigham, J. K., and Miller, G. H. (1983). “Paleotemperature estimates of the Alaskan Arctic Coastal Plain during the last 125,000 years.” Proc., Fourth Int. Conf. on Permafrost, National Academy Press, Washington, D.C., 80–85.
3.
Carter, L. D., Forester, R. M., and Nelson, R. E. (1984). “Mid‐Wisconsin through early Holocene changes in seasonal climate in northern Alaska.” Eighth Biennial Meeting, American Quaternary Association, 20–22.
4.
Carter, L. D., et al. (1986). “Late Cenozoic Arctic Ocean sea ice and terrestrial paleoclimate.” Geol., 14, 675–678.
5.
Dyke, A. S., and Prest, V. K. (1987). “Late Wisconsinan and Holocene history of the Laurentide Ice Sheet.” The Laurentide Ice Sheet, R. J. Fulton and J. T. Andrews, eds., Géographie Physique et Quaternaire, XLI, 237–264.
6.
Forester, R. M. (1987). “Late Quaternary paleoclimate records from lacustrine ostracodes.” North America and adjacent oceans during the last deglaciation, W. F. Ruddiman and H. E. Wright, Jr., eds., The Geological Society of America, Boulder, Colo., The Geology of North America, v. K‐3, 261–276.
7.
Foscolos, A. E., Rutter, N. W., and Hughes, O. L. (1977). “The use of pedological studies in interpreting the quaternary history of central Yukon Territory.” Bull. 271, Geological Survey of Canada.
8.
Fullerton, D. S., and Richmond, G. M. (1986). “Comparison of the marine oxygen isotope record, the eustatic sea level record, and the chronology of glaciation in the United States of America.” Quaternary glaciations in the northern hemisphereQuaternary Sci. Reviews, 5, 197–200.
9.
Funder, S., Abrahamsen, N., Bennike, O., and Feyling‐Hanssen, R. W. (1985). “Forested Arctic: Evidence from north Greenland.” Geol., 13, 542–546.
10.
Hamilton, T. D. (1986). “Late Cenozoic glaciation in the central Brooks Range.” T. D. Hamilton, K. M. Reed, and R. M. Thorson, eds., Glaciation in Alaska, the geologic record, Alaska Geological Society, Anchorage, Alaska, 9–50.
11.
Harris, S. A. (1982). “Identification of permafrost zones using selected permafrost landforms.” Proc., Fourth Canadian Permafrost Conference, National Research Council of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, 49–58.
12.
Heginbottom, J. B. (1984). “The mapping of permafrost.” Can. Geographer, 28, 78–83.
13.
Hunter, J. A. (1988). “Permafrost aggradation and degradation on arctic coasts of North America.” Proc., Fifth Int. Conf. on Permafrost vol. 3, Tapir Publishers, Trondheim, Norway, 27–34.
14.
Judge, A. (1986). “Permafrost distribution and the quaternary history of the Mackenzie‐Beaufort region: a geothermal perspective.” Correlation of quaternary deposits and events around the margin of the Beaufort Sea: Contributions from a joint Canadian‐American Workshop, Open File Report 1237, Geological Survey of Canada, 41–45.
15.
Lachenbruch, A. H. (1962). “Mechanics of thermal contraction cracks and ice‐wedge polygons in permafrost.” Geological Society of America Special Paper 70.
16.
Mackay, J. R., Rampton, V. N., and Fyles, J. G. (1972). “Relic Pleistocene permafrost, western Arctic, Canada.” Sci., 176, 1321–1323.
17.
Matthews, J. V., Jr., Mott, R. J., and Vincent, J.‐S. (1986). “Preglacial and interglacial environments of Banks Island: Pollen and macrofossils from Duck Hawk Bluffs and related sites.” Géographic Physique et Quaternaire, XL, 279–298.
18.
McCulloch, D., and Hopkins, D. (1966). “Evidence for an early recent warm interval in northwestern Alaska.” Geological Society of America Bulletin, 77, 1089–1108.
19.
Morison, S. R., and Hein, F. J. (1987). “Sedimentology of the White Channel gravels, Klondike area, Yukon Territory: Fluvial deposits of a confined valley.” F. G. Ethridge, R. M. Flores, and M. D. Harvey, eds., Recent developments in fluvial sedimentology, Special Publication 39, Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists, 205–216.
20.
Nelson, R. E., and Carter, L. D. (1985). “Pollen analysis of a late Pliocene and early Pleistocene section from the Gubik Formation of Arctic Alaska.” Quaternary Res., 24, 295–306.
21.
Nelson, R. E., and Carter, L. D. (1987). “Paleoenvironmental analysis of insects and extralimital Populus from an early Holocene site on the Arctic slope of Alaska.” Arctic and Alpine Res., 19, 230–241.
22.
Péwé, T. L. (1975). “Quaternary geology of Alaska.” Professional Paper 835, U.S. Geological Survey.
23.
Péwé, T. L. (1983). “The periglacial environment in North America during late Wisconsin time.” Porter, S. C., ed., The Late Pleistocene, H. E. Wright, Jr., ed., Late‐Quaternary environments of the United States, University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, Minn. 157–189.
24.
Ramanathan, V. (1988). “The greenhouse theory of climate change: A test by an inadvertent global experiment.” Sci., 240, 293–299.
25.
Repenning, C. A., et al. (1987). “The Beringian ancestry of Phenacomys (Rodentia: Cricetidae) and the beginning of the modern Arctic Ocean borderland biota.” Bull. 1687, U.S. Geological Survey.
26.
Richmond, G. M., and Fullerton, D. S. (1986). “Introduction to quaternary glaciations in the United States of America,” Quaternary glaciations in the northern hemisphere V. Sibrava, D. Q. Bowen, and G. M. Richmond, eds., Quaternary Sci. Reviews, 5, 3–10.
27.
Rieger, S. (1983). The genesis and classification of cold soils. Academic Press, New York, N.Y.
28.
Ritchie, J. C., Cwynar, L. C., and Spear, R. W. (1983). “Evidence from northwest Canada for an early Holocene Milankovitch thermal maximum.” Nature, 305, 126–128.
29.
Shackleton, N. J., Imbrie, J., and Pisias, N. G. (1988). “The evolution of oxygen isotope variability in the North Atlantic over the past three million years.” Philos. Trans. Royal Soc. London, B318, 679–688.
30.
Sher, A. V., et al. (1979). “Late Cenozoic of the Kolyma Lowland.” 14th Tour Guide XI, Pacific Science Congress, Academy of Sciences, Moscow, U.S.S.R.
31.
Tarnocai, C. (1989). “Paleosols of northwestern Canada.” Late Cenozoic history of the interior basins of Alaska and the Yukon. L. D. Carter, T. D. Hamilton, and J. P. Galloway, eds., U.S. Geological Survey Circular 1026, 39–44.
32.
Vincent, J.‐S. (1989). “Quaternary geology of the northern Canadian Interior Plains.” Quaternary Geology of Canada and Greenland. R. J. Fulton, ed., The Geological Society of America, Boulder, Colorado, The Geology of North America, v. K‐1, 100–137.
33.
Washburn, A. L. (1979/1980). “Permafrost features as evidence of climatic change.” Earth‐Science Reviews, 15, 327–402.

Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to Journal of Cold Regions Engineering
Journal of Cold Regions Engineering
Volume 4Issue 1March 1990
Pages: 43 - 53

History

Published online: Mar 1, 1990
Published in print: Mar 1990

Permissions

Request permissions for this article.

Authors

Affiliations

L. David Carter
Geologist, U.S. Geological Survey, 4200 University Dr., Anchorage, AK 99508‐4667

Metrics & Citations

Metrics

Citations

Download citation

If you have the appropriate software installed, you can download article citation data to the citation manager of your choice. Simply select your manager software from the list below and click Download.

Cited by

View Options

Get Access

Access content

Please select your options to get access

Log in/Register Log in via your institution (Shibboleth)
ASCE Members: Please log in to see member pricing

Purchase

Save for later Information on ASCE Library Cards
ASCE Library Cards let you download journal articles, proceedings papers, and available book chapters across the entire ASCE Library platform. ASCE Library Cards remain active for 24 months or until all downloads are used. Note: This content will be debited as one download at time of checkout.

Terms of Use: ASCE Library Cards are for individual, personal use only. Reselling, republishing, or forwarding the materials to libraries or reading rooms is prohibited.
ASCE Library Card (5 downloads)
$105.00
Add to cart
ASCE Library Card (20 downloads)
$280.00
Add to cart
Buy Single Article
$35.00
Add to cart

Get Access

Access content

Please select your options to get access

Log in/Register Log in via your institution (Shibboleth)
ASCE Members: Please log in to see member pricing

Purchase

Save for later Information on ASCE Library Cards
ASCE Library Cards let you download journal articles, proceedings papers, and available book chapters across the entire ASCE Library platform. ASCE Library Cards remain active for 24 months or until all downloads are used. Note: This content will be debited as one download at time of checkout.

Terms of Use: ASCE Library Cards are for individual, personal use only. Reselling, republishing, or forwarding the materials to libraries or reading rooms is prohibited.
ASCE Library Card (5 downloads)
$105.00
Add to cart
ASCE Library Card (20 downloads)
$280.00
Add to cart
Buy Single Article
$35.00
Add to cart

Media

Figures

Other

Tables

Share

Share

Copy the content Link

Share with email

Email a colleague

Share