Frozen Ground

Frozen Ground

FROZEN GROUND The News Bulletin of the International Permafrost Association Number 24, December 2000 International Permafrost Association The International Permafrost Association, founded in 1983, has as its objectives fostering the dissemination of knowledge concerning permafrost and promoting cooperation among persons and national or international or- ganizations engaged in scientific investigation and engineering work on permafrost. Membership is through ad- hering national or multinational organizations or as individuals in countries where no Adhering Body exists. The IPA is governed by its officers and a Council consisting of representatives from 23 Adhering Bodies having inte- rests in some aspect of theoretical, basic and applied frozen ground research, including permafrost, seasonal frost, artificial freezing and periglacial phenomena. Committees, Working Groups, and Task Forces organize and coor- dinate research activities and special projects. The IPA became an Affiliated Organization of the International Union of Geological Sciences in July 1989. The Association’s primary responsibilities are convening International Permafrost Conferences and accomplishing special projects such as preparing maps, bibliographies, and glossaries. The first Conference was held in West Lafayette, Indiana, USA, 1963; the second in Yakutsk, Siberia, 1973; the third in Edmonton, Canada, 1978; the fourth in Fairbanks, Alaska, 1983; the fifth in Trondheim, Norway, 1988; the sixth in Beijing, China, 1993; and the seventh in Yellowknife, Canada, 1998. Plans are being made to hold the eighth in Switzerland in 2003. Field excur- sions are an integral part of each Conference, and are organized by the host country. Executive Committee 1998–2003 Council Members Argentina President Austria Professor Hugh M. French, Canada Belgium Vice Presidents Canada Dr. Felix E. Are, Russia China Professor Wilfried Haeberli, Switzerland Denmark Members Finland Dr. Jerry Brown, U.S.A. France Dr. Truls Mølmann, Norway Professor Zhu Yuanlin, China Germany Italy Standing Committee Japan Data, Information and Communication Kazakhstan Working Groups Mongolia Global Change and Permafrost Periglacial Processes and Environments Netherlands Permafrost Engineering Norway Cryosols Poland Coastal and Offshore Permafrost Southern Hemisphere Permafrost and Periglacial Environments Russia Southern Africa Task Forces Spain Rock Glacier Dynamics and Permafrost Creep Mapping and Distribution Modelling of Mountain Permafrost Sweden Isotope/Geochemistry of Permafrost Switzerland International Secretariat United Kingdom Dr. Hanne H. Christiansen, Denmark United States of America Cover: Siberian Ground-Ice Complex: Ice-rich cliff along the coast of Bolshoy Lyakhovsky Island, Dmitry Laptev Strait near the mouth of the Zimovie River. Cliff height is 30 m. Ice-content is approximately 80%, with a coastal retreat rate of about 4.5 m/year. There are many mammoth bones in the sediments of this section. This location represents a key site to be employed in the Arctic Coastal Dynamics program (see ACD discussion in Working Group report). Photograph by Mikhail Grigoriev, Permafrost Institute, Yakutsk, Russia, August, 1998. Frozen Ground FROZEN GROUND The News Bulletin of the International Permafrost Association Number 24, December 2000 Frozen Ground, the News Bulletin of the International Executive Committee Report 2 Permafrost Association, is currently published annually. The IPA is a non-governmental association of national organizations representing 23 countries or Pushchino Conference - May 2000 3 groups of countries. The success of the bulletin depends upon the willingness of IPA participants to supply information for publication. News items from Report of Working Parties 4 any IPA participant or others are very welcome, as are interesting photographs. To submit news items or News from Members photos please contact: 17 The IPA Secretariat Other News 32 Dr. Hanne H. Christiansen Institute of Geography University of Copenhagen Publications 35 Oester Voldgade 10 1350 Koebenhavn K Denmark Forthcoming Meetings 36 This issue of Frozen Ground was compiled by Jerry Brown and Hanne H. Christiansen. Production is IPA addresses 39 courtesy of the Institute of Geography, University of Copenhagen. Copies of Frozen Ground are available from national contacts. Frozen Ground 1 Executive Committee Report Four of the six members of the Executive Committee July met in Russia, 12-15 May 2000, during the annual • The Second International Conference on Con- Pushchino conference (Hugh French, Wilfried taminants in Freezing Ground, Cambridge, UK. Haeberli, Felix Are, and Jerry Brown). The production and distribution of Frozen Ground, the annual budget August and payment of dues by Council members, requests • 31st International Geological Congress, Rio de for financial support by Working Parties, and the Janeiro, Brazil. operation of the IPA Secretariat were reviewed. Up- • Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Lis- dates on IPA-sponsored meetings for 2001 in Rome, bon, Portugal. Copenhagen, Tokyo and Mongolia were presented (see Forthcoming Meetings). Planning activities with September the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research • Fourth British Periglacial Workshop, St. An- (SCAR) and the International Arctic Science Commit- drews, Scotland, UK. tee (IASC) were approved. Members discussed with • International Workshop on Debris-covered Gla- Vladimir Melnikov and others Russians participation ciers, Seattle, Washington, USA. in the Eighth International Conference on Permafrost • Fourth International Symposium on Permafrost (VIII ICOP) in 2003. It was agreed to initiate the Engineering, Lanzhou, China. reserve fund to support VIII ICOP attendance and • International Symposium on Ground Freezing and produce a first announcement (see enclosed). Frost Action in Soils, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium. The IPA Secretariat (Hanne H. Christiansen) conti- nued to provide liaison among Executive Committee October members, with members of IPA Adhering Bodies, and • Russian-German Laptev Sea Conference, St. Peters- the production of Frozen Ground. Dr. Christiansen’s burg, Russia. work in producing the last issue of Frozen Ground • Arctic Coastal Dynamics Workshop, Potsdam, Ger- was noted with gratitude. Solicitation of funding for many. the Secretariat in Copenhagen continues. • Climate and Cryosphere (CLIC) workshop, Details of the following meetings that took place in Kiel, Germany. 2000 are presented throughout this issue: November January • Russian-American Initiative on Shelf-Land Envi- • Canadian GCOS workshop on Permafrost, Glaciers ronments (RAISE) meeting, Seattle, Washington. and Ice Caps, Ottawa, Canada. December February • Land Ocean Interactions in the Russian Arctic • Arctic Cumulative Impact Assessment (ACIA), (LOIRA) Conference, Moscow, Russia. Washington DC, USA. March • Cryosol Working Group, Oslo, Norway. Highlights 2001 April Many of the IPA Working Groups and Task Forces • International Arctic Science Committee (IASC), plan to meet during the following conferences: Cambridge, UK. • XXV General Assembly, European Geophysical So- • First European Permafrost Conference, March, ciety, Nice, France. Rome, Italy. • Fifth International Association of Geomorphology, May August, Tokyo, Japan. • The Executive Committee and Annual Pushchino • Third International Conference on Cryopedology, Conference, Russia. August, Copenhagen, Denmark. • SCAR meeting Regional Sensitivity to Climate • International Symposium on Mountain and Arid Change in the Antarctic (RiSCC), Johannesburg, Land Permafrost, September, Ulaanbaator, Mongo- South Africa. lia. June The Executive Committee notes, with deep regret, the • International Workshop on Permafrost Engineering; recent passing of a long-time periglacial colleague Longyearbyen, Svalbard. Professor Anna Dylikowa (University of Lodz, • International Workshop on Permafrost Monitoring Poland). and Databases, Fairbanks, Alaska, USA. 2 Frozen Ground Pushchino Conference - May 2000 The International Conference on Rhythms of Natural IPA Past Vice-President Vladimir Melnikov, Director Processes in the Earth Cryosphere was held in of the Institute of Earth Cryosphere at Tyumen, Sibe- Pushchino, 12-15 May 2000. The conference was ria. Vice-Chairman was Academician V.A. Shuvalov, attended by over 200 persons from all parts of Russia Director of the Institute for Basic Biological Problems together with approximately 15 non-Russian partici- at Pushchino. Other members of the committee in- pants from United States, Canada, Germany, and cluded Dr R. M. Kamensky, Director of the Institute of Kazakhstan. The sponsors of this annual conference Permafrost and Development of Natural Resources were: the Scientific Council on Earth Cryology; the (Yakutsk), Dr D. Gilichinsky (Institute for Basic Institute of the Earth Cryosphere, Siberian Division, Biological Problems) and Dr A. V. Pavlov (Institute of RAS; the Institute for Basic Biological Problems, RAS; the Earth Cryosphere). An Editorial-Publishing the Institute of Permafrost and Development of Natu- Committee was chaired by Professor V. N. Konischchev ral Resources of the Cryolithozone, Siberian Division, (Moscow State University). The IPA was represented RAS; the Russian Foundation for Basic Research; and at the conference by President Hugh French, Vice- the International Permafrost Association. The Scien- Presidents Wilfried Haeberli and Felix Are, and tific Council on Earth Cryology, Russian Academy of Executive Committee member Jerry

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    44 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us