Abstract

Abstract The combination of glacial history, ice‐rich parent materials, and ultra‐continental climate has produced unique soil landscapes in the Lower Kolyma River, a region representative of much of the arctic and subarctic lowlands of unglaciated western Beringia. All soils observed in the study area were underlain by permafrost. Soil development is generally controlled by available soil moisture, surface organic layer thickness, landscape position, and permafrost. The depth to the permafrost table varies from less than 25 cm under peaty surfaces to greater than one meter on rapidly drained alpine summits. The predominant parent materials for soil development in the lowlands are the “yedoma”; sediments‐Pleistocene deposits of presumed wind‐blown silt that contain large volumes of massive ground ice. Beneath the expansive taiga forest, soils exhibit active cryoturbation, as evident in disrupted soil horizons, incorporated organic matter, and hummocky surface expression. The tundra vegetation, where mean ...

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