Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Coastal lake sediments from Arctic Svalbard suggest colder summers are stormier

Zofia Stachowska, Willem G. M. van der Bilt, Mateusz C. Strzelecki

Nature Communications · 2024

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Summary

The Arctic is rapidly losing its sea ice cover while the region warms faster than anywhere else on Earth. As larger areas become ice-free for longer, winds strengthen and interact more with open waters. Ensuing higher waves also increase coastal erosion and flooding, threatening communities and releasing permafrost carbon. However, the future trajectory of these changes remains poorly understood as instrumental observations and geological archives remain rare and short. Here, we address this critical knowledge gap by presenting a continuous Holocene-length reconstruction of Arctic eolian activity using coastal lake sediments from Svalbard. Exposed to both polar Easterlies and Westerly storm tracks, sheltered by a bedrock barrier, and subjected to little post-glacial uplift, our study site

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1038/s41467-024-53875-1
Catalogue ID
SNmois7ptz-jpctsd
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