Climate trends in northern Ontario and Québec from borehole temperature profiles

The ground surface temperature histories of the past 500 years were reconstructed at 10 sites containing 18 boreholes in northeastern Canada. The boreholes, between 400 and 800 m deep, are located north of 51° N and west and east of James Bay in northern Ontario and Québec. We find that both sides o...

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Main Authors: C. Pickler, H. Beltrami, J.-C. Mareschal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2016-12-01
Series:Climate of the Past
Online Access:http://www.clim-past.net/12/2215/2016/cp-12-2215-2016.pdf
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spelling doaj-1645dc586728400d83aa9607230f55ad2020-11-24T21:35:52ZengCopernicus PublicationsClimate of the Past1814-93241814-93322016-12-0112122215222710.5194/cp-12-2215-2016Climate trends in northern Ontario and Québec from borehole temperature profilesC. Pickler0H. Beltrami1J.-C. Mareschal2GEOTOP, Centre de Recherche en Géochimie et en Géodynamique, Université du Québec à Montréal, Montréal, Québec, CanadaClimate & Atmospheric Sciences Institute and Department of Earth Sciences, St. Francis Xavier University, Antigonish, Nova Scotia, CanadaGEOTOP, Centre de Recherche en Géochimie et en Géodynamique, Université du Québec à Montréal, Montréal, Québec, CanadaThe ground surface temperature histories of the past 500 years were reconstructed at 10 sites containing 18 boreholes in northeastern Canada. The boreholes, between 400 and 800 m deep, are located north of 51° N and west and east of James Bay in northern Ontario and Québec. We find that both sides of James Bay have experienced similar ground surface temperature histories with a warming of 1.51 ± 0.76 K during the period of 1850 to 2000, similar to borehole reconstructions for the southern portion of the Superior Province and in agreement with available proxy data. A cooling period corresponding to the Little Ice Age was found at only one site. Despite permafrost maps locating the sites in a region of discontinuous permafrost, the ground surface temperature histories suggest that the potential for permafrost was minimal to absent over the past 500 years. This could be the result of air surface temperature interpolation used in permafrost models being unsuitable to account for the spatial variability of ground temperatures along with an offset between ground and air surface temperatures due to the snow cover.http://www.clim-past.net/12/2215/2016/cp-12-2215-2016.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author C. Pickler
H. Beltrami
J.-C. Mareschal
spellingShingle C. Pickler
H. Beltrami
J.-C. Mareschal
Climate trends in northern Ontario and Québec from borehole temperature profiles
Climate of the Past
author_facet C. Pickler
H. Beltrami
J.-C. Mareschal
author_sort C. Pickler
title Climate trends in northern Ontario and Québec from borehole temperature profiles
title_short Climate trends in northern Ontario and Québec from borehole temperature profiles
title_full Climate trends in northern Ontario and Québec from borehole temperature profiles
title_fullStr Climate trends in northern Ontario and Québec from borehole temperature profiles
title_full_unstemmed Climate trends in northern Ontario and Québec from borehole temperature profiles
title_sort climate trends in northern ontario and québec from borehole temperature profiles
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Climate of the Past
issn 1814-9324
1814-9332
publishDate 2016-12-01
description The ground surface temperature histories of the past 500 years were reconstructed at 10 sites containing 18 boreholes in northeastern Canada. The boreholes, between 400 and 800 m deep, are located north of 51° N and west and east of James Bay in northern Ontario and Québec. We find that both sides of James Bay have experienced similar ground surface temperature histories with a warming of 1.51 ± 0.76 K during the period of 1850 to 2000, similar to borehole reconstructions for the southern portion of the Superior Province and in agreement with available proxy data. A cooling period corresponding to the Little Ice Age was found at only one site. Despite permafrost maps locating the sites in a region of discontinuous permafrost, the ground surface temperature histories suggest that the potential for permafrost was minimal to absent over the past 500 years. This could be the result of air surface temperature interpolation used in permafrost models being unsuitable to account for the spatial variability of ground temperatures along with an offset between ground and air surface temperatures due to the snow cover.
url http://www.clim-past.net/12/2215/2016/cp-12-2215-2016.pdf
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