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The effect of human activities on moisture content of soils and underlying permafrost from the McMurdo Sound region, Antarctica

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 May 2004

I. B. Campbell
Affiliation:
Land and Soil Consultancy Services, 23 View Mount, Stoke, Nelson, New Zealand
G. G. C. Claridge
Affiliation:
Land and Soil Consultancy Services, 23 View Mount, Stoke, Nelson, New Zealand
M. R. Balks
Affiliation:
Department of Earth Sciences, University of Waikato, Private Bag 3105, Hamilton, New Zealand

Abstract

Soils and the underlying permafrost from undisturbed sites and sites that had been disturbed by construction activities at Marble Point and Pram Point in the McMurdo Sound region were sampled from excavated pits and drill cores. Gravimetric moisture (ice) contents and particle size distribution were determined. Volumetric moisture contents were calculated from these results. At undisturbed sites soil moisture contents within the active layer (to c. 60 cm depth) were low and ranged from 0.5% by weight at the soil surface to 10% above the permafrost. The permafrost was generally completely saturated with ice, but sometimes contained considerable excess ice, with ice contents rising as high as 80% by volume. At disturbed sites, soil moisture contents within the active layer were similar to those of the undisturbed sites (generally <10% by weight) but within the permafrost, moisture contents were lower and less variable than in the undisturbed sites, rarely exceeding 20% by weight. The release of considerable quantities of water from the permafrost as a result of land disturbance during construction activities caused stream flows, soil shrinkage, land slumping and salinisation, resulting in significant permanent environmental damage. At Marble Point there has been no significant re-establishment of icy permafrost in the disturbed soils in the 30 years since land disturbance occurred.

Type
Papers—Life Sciences and Oceanography
Copyright
© Antarctic Science Ltd 1994

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