“…Lithalsas, such as the one considered here, are characterized by a negligible organic matter cover (i.e., in areas outside of peatlands), perennially unsaturated conditions (with the exception of short periods of time following spring snowmelt or high magnitude rainfall events), and snow cover redistribution to prevent the insulation of the top of the mound (Harris, 1993; Wolfe et al., 2014). These raised periglacial landforms located in non‐wetland environments have been documented worldwide, such as Canada (Allard et al., 1986, 1996; Calmels & Allard, 2008; Deslauriers et al., 2021; Paul et al., 2021; Wolfe et al., 2014; Wolfe & Morse, 2017; Y. Zhang et al., 2014), Eurasia (Iwahana et al., 2012; Wünnemann et al., 2008; Y. Zhang et al., 2021), Scandinavia (Emmert & Kneisel, 2021; Saemundsson et al., 2012; Westin & Zuidhoff, 2001), and parts of northern Europe (Pissart, 2000). The observations presented in this study provide field‐based insights into the processes that govern how these features likely will change over time in unsaturated environments dominated by mineral soils (gelisols), which comprise a large fraction of the surficial soils of the Arctic and subarctic, particularly in the continuous and discontinuous permafrost zones (Tarnocai et al., 2009).…”