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River-ice mounds on Alaska’s North Slope

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Steven A. Arcone
Affiliation:
U.S. Army Cold Regions Research and and Engineering Laboratory, 72 Lyme Road, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755. U.S.A.
Allan J. Delaney
Affiliation:
U.S. Army Cold Regions Research and and Engineering Laboratory, 72 Lyme Road, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755. U.S.A.
Darryl Calkins
Affiliation:
U.S. Army Cold Regions Research and and Engineering Laboratory, 72 Lyme Road, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755. U.S.A.
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Abstract

Type
Correspondence
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1989

Sir

The U.S. Army Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory (CRREL) was contracted by the U.S. Department of Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) to conduct water-availability studies in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) during March 1988. The objective was to identify the presence of unfrozen water beneath selected rivers and lakes in the ANWR using a UHF short-pulse radar mounted to a helicopter. It was generally believed before the study by both CRREL and FWS personnel that unfrozen water would be found only in the aufeis-formation zones down-river of the known water sources (hot springs) and in the deeply cut coves of the foothills defining the southern boundary of the coastal plain. If unfrozen water did exist beneath the shallow streams of the flood plain and coastal deltas, it would be a “needle in a haystack” for our low and slow airborne radar to find. Instead, however, we were confronted with myriads of ice mounds, most existing as small ridges and often grouped in twos and threes, throughout the entire length of all the major rivers, with about 70% of them containing unfrozen water. Generally, these mounds rose 2–3 m above the level of the surrounding ice sheet. Drilling into two of these mounds revealed water under pressure.

The major waterways studied were Canning, Tamayariak, Katakturuk, Sadlerochit, Hulahula, Okpilak and Jago Rivers, and Itkilyariak and Okerokovik Creeks, shown in Figure 1. We used topographic maps to identify our positions in general and a satellite-based Global Positioning System (Mororola Mini-Ranger) to define the end points of our transects. A full data report is being published through CRREL (Reference Arcone, Delaney and CalkinsArcone and others, 1989) in which the transects are approximately placed on 1955 USGS topographic maps. We were based at Barter Island where the USGS coordinates for the aircraft hangar agreed with our GPS reading to within 3” of latitude and longitude. Most of our radar profiles deliberately traversed the mounds.

The radar equipment we used was an Xadar control unit mated to a GSSI Model 3102 antenna unit mounted off the skids of a Bell Long Ranger helicopter. Details of this equipment and its operation for river-ice surveying have been discussed recently in this journal (Reference Arcone and DelaneyArcone and Delaney, 1987). The graphic output is a horizontal composition of thousands of echo scans (-30/cm) wherein darkness is proportional to signal intensity, the horizontal axis is proportional to distance, and the vertical axis to time of return. Helicopter altitude was generally 4–6 m and flight speed about 5 m/s. Fluctuations in altitude and helicopter clutter are apparent in the radar data.

Fig.1. Location of waterways studied in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

Fig.2. a. Ice mound on Sadlerochit River, on 27 March 1988. b. Same mound as in (a) showing split along the crest after snow was removed.

Fig.3. Short-pulse radar profile taken along the ridges of eight consecutive mounds in Hulahula River. Numhers at the bottom are approximate depths in meters of water under the ridges as interpreted using the ice-depth scale on the graph. “KL2” is one of about 100 such profiles compiled in a CRREL report.

Figure 2a is a photograph of one of the mounds encountered on Sadlerochit River. These mounds were 2–3 m high, 10–20 m wide, and 30–40 m long, with the long axis in the stream-channel direction. Most mounds, including these, were split along the top-surface long axis as seen in Figure 2b (a second mound can be seen in the background). A typical radar profile taken purposely over the ridges of several mounds along a 120 m reach of Hulahula River is shown in Figure 3. The vertical dashed lines are event markers entered on the magnetic tape when the antenna passed over a mound. In this figure, the ice surface, subsurface water, and inter-mound sub-ice gravel bottom reflections are identified. The water reflection is easily identified by its strong intensity, estimated from the oscilloscope trace at −30 dB greater than the ice-surface reflection in some cases. This is due to a weakening of the surface reflection by a layer of snow or an intensification of the water reflection by a focusing effect of the mounds. Given the size, homogeneity, and low-loss dielectric properties of the mounds, it is plausible that both the mounds and their associated unfrozen water could be inventoried with airborne SAR imagery as has been done with lakes (Reference MellorMellor, 1985).

The sources of water for these mounds are not certain at this time. There appear to be two explanations. The data from a radar survey around two mounds suggest isolated thaw bulbs which could be related to the channel geometry and river-flow regimes. A second possibility is that deep aquifers exist beneath the stream bed, implying that many of the mounds may be connected. If true, such aquifers and pressure must extend the length of all these rivers, as mounds existed in their coastal deltas.

Reference Leffingwell and DeLeffingwell (1919) briefly described these features in Canning River and ascribed their origin to hydraulic pressure caused by retarded flow. A computer review of the CRREL Cold Regions Bibliography Data Base using key words that could describe these river-ice mounds uncovered CRREL Draft Translation 399, Siberian naleds (Reference AlekseyevAlekseev and others, 1973). This translation described a river-ice mound, similar to the features we observed on the rivers in the ANWR, and referred to them as “naled-heaving hummocks” because of their formation in the river. Individual contributors to this translation often referred to these river hummocks as mixed naleds, the term “mixed” being associated with the source of water(s) for the hummock formation. However, no one actually formulated or documented the process that describes their development. Based on English abstracts of untranslated Russian literature, there appears to be additional documentation on the occurrence of river-ice mounds.

References

Alekseyev, V.R. 1973 Siberian naleds. CRREL Draft Translation 399. Google Scholar
Arcone, S.A. Delaney, A.J.. 1987 Airborne river–ice thickness profiling with helicopter–borne UHF short–pulse radar. J. Claciol., 33(115), 330340.Google Scholar
Arcone, S.A. Delaney, A.J. Calkins, D.. In press. Water detection in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge using helicopter–borne short pulse radar. CRREL Rep. Google Scholar
Leffingwell, E. De, K.. 1919 The Canning River region, northern Alaska. U.S. Geol. Surv. Prof. Pap. 109. Google Scholar
Mellor, J.C. 1985 Radar interpreted Arctic lake depths- Barrow, HarriSOIl Bay, Howard Pass, Ikpikpuk River,Killik River. Lookout Ridge, Meade River, Misheguk Mountain , Teshekpuk Lake, Umiat , Vtukok River, and Wainwright quadrangles. Anchorage, AK, Bureau of Land Management. (BLM–AK–PT–85– (020 through 031) −7200–029.)Google Scholar
Figure 0

Fig.1. Location of waterways studied in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

Figure 1

Fig.2. a. Ice mound on Sadlerochit River, on 27 March 1988. b. Same mound as in (a) showing split along the crest after snow was removed.

Figure 2

Fig.3. Short-pulse radar profile taken along the ridges of eight consecutive mounds in Hulahula River. Numhers at the bottom are approximate depths in meters of water under the ridges as interpreted using the ice-depth scale on the graph. “KL2” is one of about 100 such profiles compiled in a CRREL report.