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Permafrost is an important part of the cryosphere, playing an integral role in the hydrologic cycle, ecology, and influencing human activity. Melting of ground ice can drastically change landscapes and associated thaw subsidence may induce instability of infrastructure. The terrain conditions on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau are complex, and the spatial distribution of ground ice is highly variable, so knowledge of its abundance and variability is required for impact assessments relating to the degradation of permafrost. This study examined 55 permafrost samples from warm, ice-rich permafrost region in Beiluhe Basin, Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. The samples were examined using Computed Tomography scanning, and the ice content and cryostructure were determined. The results indicated that: 1) variation in volumetric ice content was considerable (0%-70%), with a mean value of 17%; 2) seven cryostructures were identified, including crustal, vein, lenticular, ataxitic, reticulate and layered cryostructure; 3) volumetric ice content varied by cryostructure, with the highest associated with layered and ataxitic cryostructures. Volumetric ice contents were lowest for samples with pore and lenticular cryostructures. This work provides detailed ground ice content and will be helpful for assessing thaw subsidence and infrastructure stability on Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.

期刊论文 2021-05-01 DOI: 10.1007/s11629-020-6197-x ISSN: 1672-6316

The cryostratigraphy of permafrost in ultraxerous environments is poorly known. In this study, icy permafrost cores from University Valley (McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica) were analysed for sediment properties, ground-ice content, types and distribution of cryostructures, and presence of unconformities. No active layer exists in the valley, but the ice table, a sublimation unconformity, ranges from 0 to 60cm depth. The sediments are characterised as a medium sand, which classifies them as low to non-frost susceptible. Computed tomography (CT) scan images of the icy permafrost cores revealed composite cryostructures that included the structureless, porous visible, suspended and crustal types. These cryostructures were observed irrespective of ground-ice origin (vapour deposited and freezing of snow meltwater), suggesting that the type and distribution of cryostructures could not be used as a proxy to infer the mode of emplacement of ground ice. Volumetric ice content derived from the CT scan images underestimated measured volumetric ice content, but approached measured excess ice content. A palaeo-sublimation unconformity could not be detected from a change in cryostructures, but could be inferred from an increase in ice content at the maximum predicted ice table depth. This study highlights some of the unique ground-ice processes and cryostructures in ultraxerous environments. Copyright (c) 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

期刊论文 2017-10-01 DOI: 10.1002/ppp.1948 ISSN: 1045-6740
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