Rapid Saline Permafrost Thaw Below a Shallow Thermokarst Lake in Arctic Alaska

Jones, B.M., M.Z. Kanevskiy, A.D. Parsekian, H. Bergstedt, M.K. Ward Jones, R.C. Rangel, K.M. Hinkel, and Y. Shur, 2023: Rapid Saline Permafrost Thaw Below a Shallow Thermokarst Lake in Arctic Alaska, Geophysical Research Letters, 50(22), https://doi.org/10.1029/2023GL105552

Abstract

Permafrost warming and degradation is well documented across the Arctic. However, observation- and model-based studies typically consider thaw to occur at 0°C, neglecting the widespread occurrence of saline permafrost in coastal plain regions. In this study, we document rapid saline permafrost thaw below a shallow arctic lake. Over the 15-year period, the lakebed subsided by 0.6 m as ice-rich, saline permafrost thawed. Repeat transient electromagnetic measurements show that near-surface bulk sediment electrical conductivity increased by 198% between 2016 and 2022. Analysis of wintertime Synthetic Aperture Radar satellite imagery indicates a transition from a bedfast to a floating ice lake with brackish water due to saline permafrost thaw. The regime shift likely contributed to the 65% increase in thermokarst lake lateral expansion rates. Our results indicate that thawing saline permafrost may be contributing to an increase in landscape change rates in the Arctic faster than anticipated.