Drying of tundra landscapes will limit subsidence-induced acceleration of permafrost thaw: Modeling Archive

DOI: 10.5440/1876200
NGEE Arctic Record ID: NGA288

Abstract

This Modeling Archive is in support of a NGEE Arctic publication in review “Drying of tundra landscapes will limit subsidence-induced acceleration of permafrost thaw”. The study used a cryohydrology model to assess the potential risk of abrupt permafrost thaw triggered by melting ground ice, a key open question associated with permafrost response to a warming Arctic. The spatially resolved simulations are for a small catchment 465 ice-wedge polygons in polygonal tundra near Utqiaġvik, Alaska in the high-emissions RCP8.5 climate scenario. The simulations are compared to runoff, evapotranspiration and subsidence in the current climate and agree well. The study used the ATS code configured as an intermediate-scale cryohydrology model (Advanced Terrestrial Simulator, Version ngee_ism_v2 https://github.com/amanzi/amanzi/releases/tag/ngee_ism_v2). The archive includes input files for spinup (1985 to 2005) and projections (2006 to 2100 – the manuscript reports 2006 to 2098). Three of the projections include the effects of subsidence and microtopography change with different depth profiles of ice content corresponding to the median, 20th percentile and 80th percentile. The fourth projection has subsidence turnoff and uses the reference case (median) ice content. Spatially averaged or aggregated output variables are included for the projections. Selected checkpoint files for the projections and postprocessing scripts are also included. Files included are *.xml; *.h5; *.exo; *.py; *.sh, *. nb, mesh files, and a tar.gz file.

The Next-Generation Ecosystem Experiments: Arctic (NGEE Arctic), was a research effort to reduce uncertainty in Earth System Models by developing a predictive understanding of carbon-rich Arctic ecosystems and feedbacks to climate. NGEE Arctic was supported by the Department of Energy's Office of Biological and Environmental Research.

The NGEE Arctic project had two field research sites: 1) located within the Arctic polygonal tundra coastal region on the Barrow Environmental Observatory (BEO) and the North Slope near Utqiagvik (Barrow), Alaska and 2) multiple areas on the discontinuous permafrost region of the Seward Peninsula north of Nome, Alaska.

Through observations, experiments, and synthesis with existing datasets, NGEE Arctic provided an enhanced knowledge base for multi-scale modeling and contributed to improved process representation at global pan-Arctic scales within the Department of Energy's Earth system Model (the Energy Exascale Earth System Model, or E3SM), and specifically within the E3SM Land Model component (ELM).

Dataset Citation

Scott Painter, Ahmad Jan, Ethan Coon. 2022. Drying of tundra landscapes will limit subsidence-induced acceleration of permafrost thaw: Modeling Archive. Next Generation Ecosystem Experiments Arctic Data Collection, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, U.S. Department of Energy, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, USA. Dataset accessed on [INSERT_DATE] at https://doi.org/10.5440/1876200.

Dates:

2006-01-01 - 2100-12-31

Geographic Location:

NGEE Arctic Utqiagvik (Barrow), Alaska

Bounding Coordinates:

N:71.35
S:71.2
E:-156.4
W:-156.7

Place Keywords:

Barrow, Alaska

Subject Keywords:

GCMD Keywords:

EARTH SCIENCE SERVICES > MODELS > LAND SURFACE MODELS

EARTH SCIENCE > LAND SURFACE > FROZEN GROUND

EARTH SCIENCE > LAND SURFACE > TOPOGRAPHY

EARTH SCIENCE > TERRESTRIAL HYDROSPHERE > SNOW/ICE

GCMD Variables:

Dataset Usage Rights
Public Datasets

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