We present a review of the changing state of European permafrost within a spatial zone that includes the continuous high latitude arctic permafrost of Svalbard and the discontinuous high altitude mountain permafrost of Iceland, Fennoscandia and the Alps. The paper focuses on methodological developments and data collection over the last decade or so, including research associated with the continent-scale network of instrumented permafrost boreholes established between 1998 and 2001 under the European Union PACE project. Data indicate recent warming trends, with greatest warming at higher latitudes. Equally important are the impacts of shorter-term extreme climatic events, most immediately reflected in changes in active layer thickness. A large number of complex variables, including altitude, topography, insolation and snow distribution, determine permafrost temperatures. The development of regionally calibrated empiricalstatistical models, and physically based process-oriented models, is described, and it is shown that, though more complex and data dependent, process-oriented approaches are better suited to estimating transient effects of climate change in complex mountain topography. Mapping and characterisation of permafrost depth and distribution requires integrated multiple geophysical approaches and recent advances are discussed. We report on recent research into ground ice formation, including ice segregation within bedrock and vein ice formation within ice wedge systems. The potential impacts of climate change on rock weathering, permafrost creep, landslides, rock falls, debris flows and slow mass movements are also discussed. Recent engineering responses to the potentially damaging effects of climate warming are outlined, and risk assessment strategies to minimise geological hazards are described. We conclude that forecasting changes in hazard occurrence, magnitude and frequency is likely to depend on process-based modelling, demanding improved understanding of geomorphological process-response systems and their impacts on human activity. We present a review of the changing state of European permafrost within a spatial zone that includes the continuous high latitude arctic permafrost of Svalbard and the discontinuous high altitude mountain permafrost of Iceland, Fennoscandia and the Alps. The paper focuses on methodological developments and data collection over the last decade or so, including research associated with the continent-scale network of instrumented permafrost boreholes established between 1998 and 2001 under the European Union PACE project. Data indicate recent warming trends, with greatest warming at higher latitudes. Equally important are the impacts of shorter-term extreme climatic events, most immediately reflected in changes in active layer thickness. A large number of complex variables, including altitude, topography, insolation and snow distribution, determine permafrost temperatures. The development of regionally calibrated empiricalstatistical models, and physically based ...
Using mass spectroscopic and ultrahigh vacuum techniques, solution and diffusion of hydrogen in tungsten was investigated for pressures between 600 and 10−8 Torr and temperatures between 1100 and 2400 K. Solubility and diffusion constants are derived from degassing rates of a solid cylinder which was pre-loaded with hydrogen at ≈600 Torr. The solubility constant, S=2.9×10−1×exp (−24000/RT) Torr liter/cm3Torr1/2, and the diffusion constant, D=4.1×10−3×exp (−9000/RT) cm2/sec, are obtained, which in conjunction with literature values for the permeation constant P are consistent with the equation P=SD. Comparison to theory indicates that the solubility and diffusion constants are characteristic of interstitially dissolved hydrogen. Expressions are derived for the concentration of interstitial hydrogen as a function of pressure and temperature. Semiquantitative values for the total hydrogen concentration at low pressures are derived from H2 pressure changes which result when a sample is flashed between selected, high temperatures. Below 10−4 Torr, the total hydrogen concentration appears to be several orders of magnitude higher than the concentration of interstitial hydrogen, indicating that hydrogen is held in, and diffuses via both interstitial sites and a second kind of site of unknown nature. A semiquantitative analysis of diffusion is given for the case of the diffusing species held in, and diffusing via, two different kinds of sites.
ABSTRACT. Climate and its long-term variability govern ground thermal conditions, and for this reason represent one of the most important impacts on creeping mountain permafrost. The decoding and better understanding of the present-day morphology and distribution of rock glaciers opens up a variety of insights into past and present environmental, especially climatic, conditions on a local to regional scale. The present study was carried out in the Swiss Alps using two different approaches: (1) kinematic analysis of specific active rock glaciers, and (2) description of the altitudinal distribution of relict rock glaciers. Two theoretical shape concepts of active rock-glacier morphology were derived: a``monomorphic'' type, representing presumably undisturbed, continuous development over several millennia, and a``polymorphic'' type, reflecting a system of (possibly climatically affected) individual creep streams several centuries old. The topoclimaticbased inventory analysis indicated an average temperature increase at relict rock-glacier fronts of approximately +2³C since the time of their decay, which is a sign of rock-glacier ages reaching back to the Alpine Late Glacial. The temperature difference of some tenths of a degree Celsius found for active/inactive rock glaciers is typical for the bandwidth of Holocene climate variations.These results confirm the importance of Alpine rock glaciers as highly sensitive indicators of past temperature evolution.
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