Vertical distribution of excess ice in icy sediments and its statistical estimation from geotechnical data (Tuktoyaktuk Coastlands, Northwest Territories)

Author(s):  
Ariane Castagner ◽  
Stephan Gruber ◽  
Alexander Brenning

<div>Excess ice can be found in the form of massive ice and within icy sediments and is an important variable to quantify as it strongly influences the geomorphic response of landscapes to permafrost thaw. The melting of excess ice in the Western Canadian Arctic has led to thaw subsidence and an increase in the number and size of thaw slumps observed across the Northwest Territories which cause issues to Northern infrastructure and affect fluvial and lacustrine watersheds. The Inuvik-Tuktoyaktuk Highway (ITH) is the first all-weather road to reach the Canadian Arctic Coast and its planning and construction has resulted in a significant cryostratigraphic dataset of 566 boreholes, which forms the basis of this contribution. Although visible ice is often recorded in boreholes, it is not a reliable measure of excess ice content on its own and there is currently no reliable method to estimate the excess ice content of boreholes based on commonly available geotechnical data. In this study, a 16-borehole subset of the ITH dataset for which samples were processed for volumetric excess ice content is used to train a beta regression model that predicts the excess ice content of stratigraphic intervals in the study area based on interval depth, visible ice content, surficial geology, and material types. The resulting predictions are compared to recorded massive ice intervals in the same boreholes and show that excess ice within icy sediments can significantly contribute to potential thaw strain and should be considered alongside massive ice when making thaw strain estimates.</div>

2012 ◽  
Vol 49 (9) ◽  
pp. 1096-1110 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Brendan O’Neill ◽  
C.R. Burn

Near-surface permafrost was sampled in summer 2010 at 26 sites in the Illisarvik drained-lake basin and nine sites in the surrounding tundra on Richards Island, NWT, to investigate the growth of segregated near-surface ground ice. Permafrost and ground ice have developed in the lake basin since drainage in 1978. The lake bed soils are predominantly silts of varying moisture and organic-matter contents, with sandier soils near the lake margins. Excess-ice contents in the basin were also variable, and ice enrichment was observed to a maximum depth of 60 cm below the 2010 permafrost table. Shrub-covered, wet areas had the highest mean excess-ice content in the top 50 cm of permafrost (10%), while grassy, dryer areas (4%) and poorly vegetated marginal areas (<1%) were less enriched with ice. Site wetness was the most important variable associated with near-surface excess-ice content in the lake basin. Silt content was a secondary variable. Mean excess-ice content in the top 50 cm of permafrost at tundra sites (25%) was much greater than in the basin, with ice enrichment to greater depths, likely a result of the time available for permafrost aggradation since the early Holocene climatic optimum.


Polar Record ◽  
1968 ◽  
Vol 14 (90) ◽  
pp. 293-304
Author(s):  
D. K. F. Wattie

Children in the Canadian north—the children of hunters and trappers, of miners and prospectors, of bush-pilots and government workers—all attend school together. This year over 8500 pupils are enrolled in the sixty-seven schools of the Northwest Territories and Arctic Quebec comprising some 3600 Eskimo pupils, 1500 Indian pupils and 3400 white and Metis. It is estimated that about 13 per cent of school-age children in the north still do not attend school; these are children whose families live outside the settlements, mainly in the Upper Mackenzie, Nahanni and Central Arctic coast areas. Camp life, however, is swiftly disappearing and a much higher percentage of school-age enrolment is expected within the next few years.


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