Active layer
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- Large CO2 and CH4 Emissions from Polygonal Tundra During Spring Thaw in Northern Alaska Naama Raz-Yaseef Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
- Patterned Ground in the Kharkhiraa Uul
- Frost Problems and Photo Interpretation of Patterned Ground*T
- Water Flow in the Active Layer Along an Arctic Slope – an Investigation Based on a Field Campaign and Model Simulations
- Pingos in Central Alaska
- Spatial Distribution of Pingos in Northern Asia
- Influence of Ice Lens Fabric on the Hydraulic Conductivity of Thawing Soil
- Climate Change and Its Influence on the Active Layer Depth in Central
- Synthesis of Studies of Palsa Formation Underlining the Importance of Local Environmental and Physical Characteristics
- Ground Subsidence and Heave Over Permafrost
- Russian and North American Approaches to Pile Design in Relation to Frost Action
- Preliminary Results of the Micro-Topographical Change and Its Effects on the Active Layer in Boreal Forest Near Yakutsk, Eastern Siberia
- Self-Organization of Sorted Patterned Ground
- Near-Surface Permafrost Ground Ice Characteristics and Ecological and Physical Drivers of Transient Layer Ice Content in Discontinuous Permafrost
- Phenomenon and Mechanism of Frost Heaving CHESTER W
- The Groundwater Hydraulics of Open System Pingos
- Impact of Meteorological Factors on Active Layer Development in Central Spitsbergen
- Climate Change Threatens Archeologically Significant Ice