Over the last few years, various studies have documented significant impacts of recent global warming across the Arctic since the mid-twentieth century, with a preferential thermal degradation of ice-rich permafrost and the related release of previously sequestered carbon (e.g., Grosse et al., 2011; Romanovsky et al., 2010). These studies indicate a sensitivity of cold Arctic permafrost to climate-driven thermokarst (thaw) initiation (Olefeldt et al., 2016). The development of thermokarst results from the thermal destabilization of ice-rich permafrost as a consequence of the increase in subsurface temperature (French, 2017; Soloviev, 1973). Over the last decades, this ice-rich permafrost has been highly vulnerable and prone to extensive degradation within the continuous permafrost zone of Eurasia and North America (Lewkowicz & Way, 2019; Olefeldt et al., 2016). Retrogressive thaw slumps (RTS) represent a dynamic form of thermokarst. They expand inland by melting of exposed ground ice in the headwall to form landslide-like U-shaped scars (Lantuit & Pollard, 2008). In the western Canadian Arctic, widespread permafrost degradation accompanied by active RTS development is mostly observed in ice-rich formerly glaciated landscapes (