• Title of article

    Warming permafrost in European mountains

  • Author/Authors

    Charles Harris، نويسنده , , Daniel Vonder Mühll، نويسنده , , Ketil Isaksen، نويسنده , , Wilfried Haeberli، نويسنده , , Johan Ludvig Sollid، نويسنده , , Lorenz King، نويسنده , , Per Holmlund، نويسنده , , Francesco Dramis، نويسنده , , Mauro Guglielmin، نويسنده , , David Palacios، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
  • Pages
    11
  • From page
    215
  • To page
    225
  • Abstract
    Here we present the first systematic measurements of European mountain permafrost temperatures from a latitudinal transect of six boreholes extending from the Alps, through Scandinavia to Svalbard. Boreholes were drilled in bedrock to depths of at least 100 m between May 1998 and September 2000. Geothermal profiles provide evidence for regional-scale secular warming, since all are nonlinear, with near-surface warm-side temperature deviations from the deeper thermal gradient. Topographic effects lead to variability between Alpine sites. First approximation estimates, based on curvature within the borehole thermal profiles, indicate a maximum ground surface warming of +1 °C in Svalbard, considered to relate to thermal changes in the last 100 years. In addition, a 15-year time series of thermal data from the 58-m-deep Murtèl–Corvatsch permafrost borehole in Switzerland, drilled in creeping frozen ice-rich rock debris, shows an overall warming trend, but with high-amplitude interannual fluctuations that reflect early winter snow cover more strongly than air temperatures. Thus interpretation of the deeper borehole thermal histories must clearly take account of the potential effects of changing snow cover in addition to atmospheric temperatures.
  • Keywords
    Permafrost , global warming , borehole temperatures , European mountains
  • Journal title
    Global and Planetary Change
  • Serial Year
    2003
  • Journal title
    Global and Planetary Change
  • Record number

    704659