Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4726019 Earth-Science Reviews 2011 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

Since its introduction, the definition of permafrost has rarely been discussed or reviewed. Recent decades have brought a series of significant, often interdisciplinary works on a periglacial zone and permafrost as well as their relation with other components of the environment, especially with glaciers. They show that, despite its unequivocal definition, the term has lost its sharpness and explicitness with regard to some aspects of research. The article presents a current state of understanding of permafrost phenomenon, regarding the use of the term permafrost, which means a physical state, not a material thing. Processes which it undergoes, that is exclusively aggradation and degradation, and also the possibility of its occurrence in glacial and periglacial environments of geographical space, where it covers over a quarter of land area on the Earth.

► Permafrost is not a material phenomenon: it is not a form but a physical state (temperature) of the lithosphere. ► In permafrost only two processes can be distinguished: freezing and thawing, or aggradation and degradation. ► The term: permafrost creep in particular should not be used in relation to permafrost: temperature cannot creep. ► Glaciers and ice-sheets, as a kind of rock, fulfill the definition of permafrost and belongs to it.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology
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