Ablation‐Limited Erosion Rates of Permafrost Riverbanks
Abstract
Permafrost thaw is hypothesized to increase riverbank erosion rates, which threatens Arctic communities and infrastructure. However, existing erosion models have not been tested against controlled flume experiments with open‐channel flow past an erodible, hydraulically rough permafrost bank. We conducted temperature‐controlled flume experiments where turbulent water eroded laterally into riverbanks consisting of sand and pore ice. The experiments were designed to produce ablation‐limited erosion such that any thawed sediment was quickly transported away from the bank. Bank erosion rates increased linearly with water temperature, decreased with pore ice content, and were insensitive to changes in bank temperature, consistent with theory. However, erosion rates were approximately a factor of three greater than expected. The heightened erosion rates were due to a greater coefficient of heat transfer from the turbulent water to the permafrost bank caused by bank grain roughness. A revised ablation‐limited bank erosion model with a heat transfer coefficient that includes bank roughness matched our experimental results well. Results indicate that bank erosion along Arctic rivers can accelerate under scenarios of warming river water temperatures for cases where the cadence of bank erosion is set by pore‐ice melting rather than sediment entrainment.
Copyright and License
© 2023 American Geophysical Union.
Acknowledgement
The authors would like to thank Kieran Dunne, Grace Knuth, Maryn Sanders, Emily Geyman, Niccolo Ragno, Anya Leeman, and Sara Polanco for help running the experiments and Chris Paola and Todd Ehlers for fruitful discussions. This work was supported by NSF Awards 2127442 and 2031532, Caltech's Resnick Sustainability Institute, and the National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowship.
Data Availability
Original photographs, laser topography scans, sonar measurements, discharge measurements, bank weight fraction water, grain size measurements, temperature sensor data, and instrument calibrations have been uploaded to a FAIR data repository (Douglas, Miller, et al., 2023).
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Additional details
- ISSN
- 2169-9011
- National Science Foundation
- RISE-2127442
- National Science Foundation
- EAR-2031532
- Resnick Sustainability Institute
- United States Department of Defense
- United States Department of Defense
- National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate (NDSEG) Fellowship
- Caltech groups
- Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, Resnick Sustainability Institute