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Permafrost and Infrastructure in the Usa Basin (Northeast European Russia): Possible Impacts of Global Warming

The relationship between permafrost conditions and the distribution of infrastructure in the Usa Basin, Northeast European Russia, is analyzed. About 75% of the Basin is underlain by permafrost terrain with various degrees of continuity (isolated patches to continuous permafrost). The region has a h...

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Published in:Ambio 2004-08, Vol.33 (6), p.289-294
Main Authors: Mazhitova, Galina, Karstkarel, Nanka, Oberman, Naum, Romanovsky, Vladimir, Kuhry, Peter
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Language:English
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container_issue 6
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container_title Ambio
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creator Mazhitova, Galina
Karstkarel, Nanka
Oberman, Naum
Romanovsky, Vladimir
Kuhry, Peter
description The relationship between permafrost conditions and the distribution of infrastructure in the Usa Basin, Northeast European Russia, is analyzed. About 75% of the Basin is underlain by permafrost terrain with various degrees of continuity (isolated patches to continuous permafrost). The region has a high level of urban and industrial development (e.g., towns, coal mines, hydrocarbon extraction sites, railway, pipelines). GIS-analyses indicate that about 60% of all infrastructure is located in the 'high risk' permafrost area, here defined as the zones of isolated to discontinuous permafrost (3-90% coverage) with 'warm' ground temperatures (0 to -2 degree C). Ground monitoring, aerial photo interpretation, and permafrost modeling suggest a differential response to future global warming. Most of the permafrost-affected terrain will likely start to thaw within a few decades to a century. This forecast poses serious challenges to permafrost engineering and calls for long-term investments in adequate infrastructure that will pay back over time.
doi_str_mv 10.1639/0044-7447(2004)033[0289:PAIITU]2.0.CO;2
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title Permafrost and Infrastructure in the Usa Basin (Northeast European Russia): Possible Impacts of Global Warming
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