4.7 Article

Periglacial Lake Origin Influences the Likelihood of Lake Drainage in Northern Alaska

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 13, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs13050852

Keywords

permafrost thaw; thermokarst; yedoma; Landsat; Alaska; thaw settlement; glaciation

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation's EnvE-Environmental Engineering program [1928048, 1927772]
  2. Div Of Chem, Bioeng, Env, & Transp Sys
  3. Directorate For Engineering [1928048, 1927772] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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This study used remote sensing and geographic data to investigate the origin and drainage of Arctic and subarctic lakes, revealing that different lake origins have an impact on drainage patterns, with small thermokarst lakes and large yedoma lakes being the most vulnerable to drainage, while large and medium-sized glacial lakes and Maar lakes are more resilient.
Nearly 25% of all lakes on earth are located at high latitudes. These lakes are formed by a combination of thermokarst, glacial, and geological processes. Evidence suggests that the origin of periglacial lake formation may be an important factor controlling the likelihood of lakes to drain. However, geospatial data regarding the spatial distribution of these dominant Arctic and subarctic lakes are limited or do not exist. Here, we use lake-specific morphological properties using the Arctic Digital Elevation Model (DEM) and Landsat imagery to develop a Thermokarst lake Settlement Index (TSI), which was used in combination with available geospatial datasets of glacier history and yedoma permafrost extent to classify Arctic and subarctic lakes into Thermokarst (non-yedoma), Yedoma, Glacial, and Maar lakes, respectively. This lake origin dataset was used to evaluate the influence of lake origin on drainage between 1985 and 2019 in northern Alaska. The lake origin map and lake drainage datasets were synthesized using five-year seamless Landsat ETM+ and OLI image composites. Nearly 35,000 lakes and their properties were characterized from Landsat mosaics using an object-based image analysis. Results indicate that the pattern of lake drainage varied by lake origin, and the proportion of lakes that completely drained (i.e., >60% area loss) between 1985 and 2019 in Thermokarst (non-yedoma), Yedoma, Glacial, and Maar lakes were 12.1, 9.5, 8.7, and 0.0%, respectively. The lakes most vulnerable to draining were small thermokarst (non-yedoma) lakes (12.7%) and large yedoma lakes (12.5%), while the most resilient were large and medium-sized glacial lakes (4.9 and 4.1%) and Maar lakes (0.0%). This analysis provides a simple remote sensing approach to estimate the spatial distribution of dominant lake origins across variable physiography and surficial geology, useful for discriminating between vulnerable versus resilient Arctic and subarctic lakes that are likely to change in warmer and wetter climates.

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