periglacial environments Flashcards
permafrosts
- rock or soil material that has remained below )c for two of more years
- upper surface thaws in summer (active layer)
- permafrost table” limit of seasonal thawing; talic which is unfrozen waer
- permafrost is melting which is NOT GOOD
why important to canadaisn
- 40% land area underlain by permafrost (50% 1970-1990s)
- 10-15% of earths total land area
- common in periglacial environments
periglacial envionements
-area/ regions where landforms and geomorphic processes are influecne by seasonal thawing and freezing, often in areas of permafrost
- freexing and thawing affects landforms
- does not relate to glacirs
distribution of permafrost
- high latitude areas (arctic regions): continuous permafrost;up to 700m thick; mean annual air temps <-7C
- towards south: discontinous permafrost; thins to only few meters, patchy and sporadic; mean annual air temps >-7C
ground ice
- frozen mositure below earth’s surface
- varies from small amount in pore space to large ice bodies
- clear or colourful ice
- not glaciers
- froszen water mosture stored in soil
- seen in North
ground ice forms
- pingo ice
- ice wedges
- polygons
pingo ice
- indicative of periglacial environemnts
- relatively clear permafrost
- occurs horizontally or in les-shaped masses
- 3-54m in height, 30-450 in diameter
- ibyuk in Northwest teritories
ice wedges
- permafrost formed in alrge ice wedges or masses with apralle or subparalle foliation
- foliated ice occurs as wedges, vertical or inclined sheets
- 2.5 cm-3m high and 0.3-9m high
- cracks
- every winter, freeze, thaw, freeze, thaw.. and builds by adding more mositure
- beauforst sea coast, canada
polygonal ground
- micro relief patern on the ground
- covers thousand of km^2 in the arctic
- ice wedges are below these polygons
- little mounds are less than 1m
- Tuktoyaktuk, northwest teritories
what does disturbance of ice ground cause
- melting of ice
thermokarst:
- erosioal process unique to perma frost
- process by which characteristic landforms results from the thawing of ice-rich permaforst and/or melting of massice ice
- not an actual landform, is an EROSIONAL PROCESS
- causes: thermokarst lakes, gorund subsidece (road disturbance, house collapse), freethaw processes (water expands by 9% on freezing, can fracture rock), procudes frost-shattered screes, felsenmeer
ice growth
- occurs preferentailly below stones in soil
- forms pipraker (needdle ice)
- ice lifts stones/ soil- frost heaving
- heaving produces sone polygon (no active erosion agent, just freeze and thaw pattern) and stone stripes
slope processes
- active layer has high water pressures (prone to mass movement, liquifaction (solifluction)); failure of slopes due to high water constent
- slow downslope movement of soil- few cms/year, produces solifluction lobes/terraces
creep
- very slow rates of movement
- can effect stability of built structures