Transient thermal modeling of permafrost conditions in Southern Norway

Thermal modeling is a powerful tool to infer the temperature regime of the ground in permafrost areas. We present a transient permafrost model, CryoGrid 2, that calculates ground temperatures according to conductive heat transfer in the soil and in the snowpack. CryoGrid 2 is forced by operational a...

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Main Authors: S. Westermann, T. V. Schuler, K. Gisnås, B. Etzelmüller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2013-04-01
Series:The Cryosphere
Online Access:http://www.the-cryosphere.net/7/719/2013/tc-7-719-2013.pdf
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spelling doaj-0a26adffd33a4bdd88a20a0567bbd51e2020-11-24T23:27:06ZengCopernicus PublicationsThe Cryosphere1994-04161994-04242013-04-017271973910.5194/tc-7-719-2013Transient thermal modeling of permafrost conditions in Southern NorwayS. WestermannT. V. SchulerK. GisnåsB. EtzelmüllerThermal modeling is a powerful tool to infer the temperature regime of the ground in permafrost areas. We present a transient permafrost model, CryoGrid 2, that calculates ground temperatures according to conductive heat transfer in the soil and in the snowpack. CryoGrid 2 is forced by operational air temperature and snow-depth products for potential permafrost areas in Southern Norway for the period 1958 to 2009 at 1 km<sup>2</sup> spatial resolution. In total, an area of about 80 000 km<sup>2</sup> is covered. The model results are validated against borehole temperatures, permafrost probability maps from "bottom temperature of snow" measurements and inventories of landforms indicative of permafrost occurrence. The validation demonstrates that CryoGrid 2 can reproduce the observed lower permafrost limit to within 100 m at all validation sites, while the agreement between simulated and measured borehole temperatures is within 1 K for most sites. The number of grid cells with simulated permafrost does not change significantly between the 1960s and 1990s. In the 2000s, a significant reduction of about 40% of the area with average 2 m ground temperatures below 0 °C is found, which mostly corresponds to degrading permafrost with still negative temperatures in deeper ground layers. The thermal conductivity of the snow is the largest source of uncertainty in CryoGrid 2, strongly affecting the simulated permafrost area. Finally, the prospects of employing CryoGrid 2 as an operational soil-temperature product for Norway are discussed.http://www.the-cryosphere.net/7/719/2013/tc-7-719-2013.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S. Westermann
T. V. Schuler
K. Gisnås
B. Etzelmüller
spellingShingle S. Westermann
T. V. Schuler
K. Gisnås
B. Etzelmüller
Transient thermal modeling of permafrost conditions in Southern Norway
The Cryosphere
author_facet S. Westermann
T. V. Schuler
K. Gisnås
B. Etzelmüller
author_sort S. Westermann
title Transient thermal modeling of permafrost conditions in Southern Norway
title_short Transient thermal modeling of permafrost conditions in Southern Norway
title_full Transient thermal modeling of permafrost conditions in Southern Norway
title_fullStr Transient thermal modeling of permafrost conditions in Southern Norway
title_full_unstemmed Transient thermal modeling of permafrost conditions in Southern Norway
title_sort transient thermal modeling of permafrost conditions in southern norway
publisher Copernicus Publications
series The Cryosphere
issn 1994-0416
1994-0424
publishDate 2013-04-01
description Thermal modeling is a powerful tool to infer the temperature regime of the ground in permafrost areas. We present a transient permafrost model, CryoGrid 2, that calculates ground temperatures according to conductive heat transfer in the soil and in the snowpack. CryoGrid 2 is forced by operational air temperature and snow-depth products for potential permafrost areas in Southern Norway for the period 1958 to 2009 at 1 km<sup>2</sup> spatial resolution. In total, an area of about 80 000 km<sup>2</sup> is covered. The model results are validated against borehole temperatures, permafrost probability maps from "bottom temperature of snow" measurements and inventories of landforms indicative of permafrost occurrence. The validation demonstrates that CryoGrid 2 can reproduce the observed lower permafrost limit to within 100 m at all validation sites, while the agreement between simulated and measured borehole temperatures is within 1 K for most sites. The number of grid cells with simulated permafrost does not change significantly between the 1960s and 1990s. In the 2000s, a significant reduction of about 40% of the area with average 2 m ground temperatures below 0 °C is found, which mostly corresponds to degrading permafrost with still negative temperatures in deeper ground layers. The thermal conductivity of the snow is the largest source of uncertainty in CryoGrid 2, strongly affecting the simulated permafrost area. Finally, the prospects of employing CryoGrid 2 as an operational soil-temperature product for Norway are discussed.
url http://www.the-cryosphere.net/7/719/2013/tc-7-719-2013.pdf
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