Abstract
The maximum seasonal depth of thaw (the active layer depth) in permafrost soils is influenced by a range of soil and atmospheric variables. The active layer depth and the temperature at the top of the permafrost have potential to provide a clear signal of a changing climate, damping out noise more effectively than atmospheric variables. A monitoring network of nine soil climate stations was established in the McMurdo Dry Valleys between 1999 and 2012. Each station monitors soil temperature to a depth of up to 1.2 m, along with a range of atmospheric variables including air temperature, solar radiation, and wind speed.Over the period of record included in this study (2000–2018): the mean active layer depth ranged from 7.6 cm at Mt. Fleming to >90 cm at Granite Harbour; the mean annual shallow (15 cm) soil temperature ranged from −24 °C at Mt. Fleming to −14 °C at Granite Harbour; and the mean summer air temperature ranged from −11 °C at Mt. Fleming to −1 °C at Granite Harbour. There was marked between-year variation but no significant trends of increase or decrease in active layer depth, or temperature at the top of the permafrost, between 2000 and 2018.Wavelet analysis showed that both global and regional climate systems correlated with de-seasonalised temperature at the top of the permafrost. The Southern Annular Mode had relationships at both annual and biannual timescales (p < 0.05); the Southern Oscillation Index had a relationship at a 2–3 year timescale (p < 0.05); and the Amundsen Sea Low had an annual signal and some between season signals (p < 0.05).The data set is too short to draw conclusions on potential longer-term changes in the soil climate. Nevertheless, the database provides a baseline against which future change can be assessed and will increase in value the longer it is maintained.
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