Abstract
ABSTRACT The outburst of Zonag Lake in 2011 triggered a series of floods in the continuous permafrost region of the hinterland of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. This re-distributed the surface water in the basin and caused rapid expansion of the tail lake (Salt Lake). To avoid potential overflow of the expanding Salt Lake, a channel was excavated to drain the lake water into a downstream river. In this study, to investigate the permafrost thermal regime and the surface deformation around the expanding Salt Lake and the channel, in-situ monitoring sections were settled from Salt Lake to the downstream of the channel to obtain the permafrost temperature. Additionally, using small baseline subset interferometric synthetic aperture radar (SBAS-InSAR), the surface deformation around Salt Lake and the channel was measured. The data showed that the ground temperature at the channel was 0.6°C higher than the natural field and the mean subsidence rate around the channel was 1.5 mm/yr higher than that at Salt Lake. These results show that the permafrost temperature in the study area changed considerably with variations in the distance from the lake/channel, and the deformation in the study area was dominated by subsidence.
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