Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Permafrost Hydrology Research Domain: Process-Based Adjustment
View through CrossRef
Permafrost hydrology is an emerging discipline, attracting increasing attention as the Arctic region is undergoing rapid change. However, the research domain of this discipline had never been explicitly formulated. Both 'permafrost' and 'hydrology' yield differing meanings across languages and scientific domains, hence 'permafrost hydrology' serves as an example of linguistic relativity. The differing views of permafrost as either an ecosystem class or a geographical region, and hydrology as a discipline concerned with either landscapes or generic water bodies, maintain a language-specific touch in the definition of permafrost hydrology. From this point of view, the English and Russian usage of this term is explained. A universal process-based definition is further proposed, developed on a specific process assemblage, including (i) water table dynamics caused by migration of an upper aquitard through freeze–thaw processes; (ii) water migration in soil matrix, driven by phase transitions in the active layer; (iii) transient water storage in solid state in the subsurface compartment. This definition is shown to fill the niche in existing vocabulary, and other definitions from northern hydrology field are revisited.
Title: Permafrost Hydrology Research Domain: Process-Based Adjustment
Description:
Permafrost hydrology is an emerging discipline, attracting increasing attention as the Arctic region is undergoing rapid change.
However, the research domain of this discipline had never been explicitly formulated.
Both 'permafrost' and 'hydrology' yield differing meanings across languages and scientific domains, hence 'permafrost hydrology' serves as an example of linguistic relativity.
The differing views of permafrost as either an ecosystem class or a geographical region, and hydrology as a discipline concerned with either landscapes or generic water bodies, maintain a language-specific touch in the definition of permafrost hydrology.
From this point of view, the English and Russian usage of this term is explained.
A universal process-based definition is further proposed, developed on a specific process assemblage, including (i) water table dynamics caused by migration of an upper aquitard through freeze–thaw processes; (ii) water migration in soil matrix, driven by phase transitions in the active layer; (iii) transient water storage in solid state in the subsurface compartment.
This definition is shown to fill the niche in existing vocabulary, and other definitions from northern hydrology field are revisited.
Related Results
Air convection in coarse blocky permafrost : a numerical modelling approach to improve the understanding of the ground thermal regime
Air convection in coarse blocky permafrost : a numerical modelling approach to improve the understanding of the ground thermal regime
Permafrost is a thermal phenomenon, defined as subsurface material with a temperature remaining below 0°C for at least two consecutive years. Permafrost occurs at high latitudes an...
Status, Changes and Impacts of Permafrost on Qinghai-Tibet Plateau
Status, Changes and Impacts of Permafrost on Qinghai-Tibet Plateau
<p>Due to the climate warming, permafrost on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (QTP) was degradating in the past decades. Since its impacts on East Asian monsoon, and even on...
Review article: A systematic review of terrestrial dissolved organic carbon in northern permafrost
Review article: A systematic review of terrestrial dissolved organic carbon in northern permafrost
Abstract. As the permafrost region warms and permafrost soils thaw, vast pools of soil organic carbon (C) become vulnerable to enhanced microbial decomposition and lateral transpor...
Permafrost Hydrology Research Domain: Process-Based Adjustment
Permafrost Hydrology Research Domain: Process-Based Adjustment
Permafrost hydrology is an emerging discipline, attracting increasing attention as the Arctic region is undergoing rapid change. However, the research domain of this discipline had...
Permafrost geotechnique for engineering design and land use planning
Permafrost geotechnique for engineering design and land use planning
The vulnerability of infrastructure to permafrost degradation strongly depends on the physical, chemical, mechanical and thermal properties of the ground. The study of permafrost p...
Integrating subsea permafrost into an Earth System Model (MPI-ESM)
Integrating subsea permafrost into an Earth System Model (MPI-ESM)
<p>Subsea permafrost on the Arctic Shelf originates as terrestrial permafrost which was submerged by ocean water following sea level rise during deglaciation. The thi...
Review of Permafrost Degradation in the Mongolian Plateau
Review of Permafrost Degradation in the Mongolian Plateau
Permafrost serves as a crucial indicator of global climate change. Its degradation significantly influences Earth’s surface systems, including hydrology, soil, climate, ecosystems,...
EO-based modelling and mapping of permafrost
EO-based modelling and mapping of permafrost
Observations have shown that climate is warming, and permafrost is thawing. The major questions now facing us are what are its impacts and consequences, and what can we can do abou...

