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Subsurface porewater flow accelerates talik development under the Alaska Highway, Yukon: A prelude to road collapse and permafrost thaw?

April 6, 2023

The presence of taliks (perennially unfrozen zones in permafrost areas) adversely affects the thermal stability of infrastructure in cold regions, including roads. The role of heat advection on talik development and feedback on permafrost degradation has not been quantified methodically in this context. We incorporate a surface energy balance model into a coupled groundwater flow and energy transport numerical model (SUTRA-ice). The model, calibrated with long-term observations (1997–2018 on the Alaska Highway), is used to investigate and quantify the role of heat advection on talik initiation and development under a road embankment. Over the 25-year simulation period, the new model is driven by reconstructed meteorological data and has a good agreement with near surface soil temperatures. The model successfully reproduces the increasing depth to the permafrost table (mean absolute error

Publication Year 2023
Title Subsurface porewater flow accelerates talik development under the Alaska Highway, Yukon: A prelude to road collapse and permafrost thaw?
DOI 10.1029/2022WR032578
Authors Lin Chen, Daniel Fortier, Jeffrey M. McKenzie, Clifford I. Voss, Pierrick Lamontagne-Halle
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Water Resource Research
Index ID 70258667
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization WMA - Earth System Processes Division
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