Unit 5 Notes Flashcards
What % of the earth’s landscape contains permafrost?
25%.
How deep can permafrost go?
Up to 1.5km deep.
What parts of the world is permafrost found in?
High-altitude, and high-latitude areas.
Which factors affect the variation in permafrost globally?
Gulf stream, North atlantic drift, volcanic activity.
What is sporadic permafrost?
Occurs at the margins of periglacial environments, is highly fragmented, only a few metres thick.
What is discontinuous permafrost?
More fragmented, thinner permafrost, forming in colder areas.
What is continuous permafrost?
Forms in the coldest areas of the world, average annual temperatures are below 6 degrees, extend down hundreds of metres.
Why does the melting of permafrost lead to a negative feedback loop?
As permafrost contains methane, there is dead organic matter found within it, meaning that as ice thaws, the gas will escape. Methane causes more warming, leading to more permafrost being defrosted.
What are the ground ice landforms?
Pore ice, needle ice, ice lenses.
What is pore ice?
Develops in pore spaces between soil/sediment particles where liquid and water can accumulate and freeze.
What is needle ice?
Consists of narrow ice slivers, up to several centimetres long, forming in moist soil
What is an ice lense?
Bodies of ice formed when moisture, mixed within soil or rock, accumulates in a localised zone.
What is the first step in ice wedge formation?
As seasons change, a crack forms in the ground, and as temperature falls to around -20 degrees, soil contracts and enlarges.
What is the second step in ice wedge formation?
In summer, ice melts and liquid from the active layer fills the crack, and water refreezes when winter hits.
What is the third step in ice wedge formation?
Cryostatic pressure causes water to expand by 9%, when freezing, causing cracks to expand, pushing soil upwards, creating a bulge.
What do temperatures have to be for an ice wedge to form?
-10 degrees, but preferably -20.
How do stones move to the surface in periglacial environments?
Frost heave.
What are the first 2 steps in frost heave?
Freezing progresses down from surface, accompanied by upward expansion, lifting the stone by freezing onto the upper surface. Freezing front progresses down space created below stone, as it is lifted.
What are the third and fourth steps in frost heave?
Ice crystals grow into the space, pushing up the stone. Thawing progresses down from the surface, contraction and lowering of surface level, but the stone is still supported by ice crystals.
What are the last two steps in frost heave?
Thawed sediment collapses around the stone, supporting it. Stone held in thawed sediment, while ice crystals melt, and space is filled by collapsing sediment.
What is the first step in formation of a stone sorted polygon?
Ground freezes from the surface downwards, stones cool down faster than surrounding soil, Moisture around stones freezes and expands by 9%, Stones are raised due to Cryostatic pressure.
What is the second step in stone sorted polygon formation?
Stones are raised high enough to break through ground surface, frost heave results in doming of overlying ground, Forms a mound because of increased volume, wet slumps into the gap below the stone, preventing it from going back to its original place.
What is the final step in stone sorted polygon formation?
Rocks accumulate at edge, stones slip or roll onto the base, rocks form patterns, steeper gradients cause striped patterns, gradual gradients cause stone polygons.
What is the first step in open system pingo formation?
Liquid groundwater is confined below impermeable permafrost, if it finds a weakness in overlying permafrost, it will rise into the crack, due to artesian pressure.