Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Pushed By Climate Change: Lake In Northwest Territories Falls Off Cliff

The Canadian Press, 09 Dec, 2015 12:29 PM
    YELLOWKNIFE — In a dramatic example of how climate change is altering the Arctic landscape, a small northern lake has fallen off a cliff after bursting through the melting earthen rampart that restrained it.
     
    A video released Wednesday by the government of the Northwest Territories shows how the lake, undermined by melting permafrost, collapsed into a valley below and created a large temporary waterfall and an oozing tongue of mud and debris. 
     
    "It drained quickly," said Steve Kokelj of the N.W.T. Geological Survey.
     
    The lake, which has no name and sits in the territory's northern corner near the community of Fort McPherson, is a victim of the region's geology and changing climate.
     
    Permafrost in this part of the N.W.T. contains a high percentage of ice in headwalls, which can be up to 30 metres thick. That ice has been there since the last ice age.
     
    Trouble starts when the headwall tops are exposed by wind or rain. The ice melts, causing the soil and rock on top to collapse. That exposes more ice, which then melts and extends the collapse, and the cycle keeps repeating.
     
    On July 15, the narrow rib of land that had kept the 1.5-hectare lake from plummeting into the valley below gave way.
     
    Within two hours, 30,000 cubic metres of water — the equivalent of a dozen Olympic-sized swimming pools — gushed over the edge in a waterfall up to five storeys high.
     
    Mud and debris filled more than a kilometre of the valley below and flowed for two days at the rate of 50 metres an hour.
     
    "It was one of those things that you can get out of the way of but you can't stop," said Kokelj.
     
    Such slumps have been getting bigger as rainfall increases and temperatures warm. The summers of 2010 and 2012 were the wettest on record and average temperatures have increased several degrees since the 1970s.
     
    There are slumps in the N.W.T. more than a kilometre long and as large as 40 hectares that have washed loose millions of cubic metres of rubble. Kokelj estimates that the amount of land affected has more than doubled since the late 1980s.
     
    The slump that sent the lake plummeting valleyward had been at work for most of a decade.
     
    Not all the water drained. Kokelj said unfrozen sediments underneath the lake blocked further erosion and stabilized the banks. The territorial government is advising people to stay away from the area, however, because the rest of the lake might still collapse.
     
    The melting will continue around the lake, which will ultimately leave it isolated and elevated on a small plateau, Kokelji said.
     
    Similar landforms, with hilltop lake sediments, are found in Wisconsin. The difference is those features formed 13,000 years ago.
     
    "There's an analogue to what we're seeing today," said Kokelj.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Adopted Boy, Grandfather, Both Missing Right Hand, Share Special Bond

    Adopted Boy, Grandfather, Both Missing Right Hand, Share Special Bond
    In an incredible coincidence, Facey's own father was also born without a right hand, giving the Newfoundland couple a natural role model for their son, Kirill, to grow up with.

    Adopted Boy, Grandfather, Both Missing Right Hand, Share Special Bond

    'Loving Father' Turcotte Doesn't Fit Portrait Of A Killer, Lawyer Argues

    Lead defence lawyer Pierre Poupart reminded the 11-person jury that Turcotte's close associates had consistently described him throughout the trial as an affectionate and doting father.

    'Loving Father' Turcotte Doesn't Fit Portrait Of A Killer, Lawyer Argues

    Cost Of Refugee Plan Pegged At $1.2 Billion Over Six Years

    Cost Of Refugee Plan Pegged At $1.2 Billion Over Six Years
    Some of that will be covered this year by $16.6 million announced by the previous Conservative government during the election and $100 million coming out of an existing pool of funds to respond to international crises.

    Cost Of Refugee Plan Pegged At $1.2 Billion Over Six Years

    Universities Across Canada To Get Funding For Research From Ice Bucket Challenge

    Universities Across Canada To Get Funding For Research From Ice Bucket Challenge
    On Thursday, the university announced it had been awarded $1.6 million so that a research team can spend the next five years investigating a cure for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS.

    Universities Across Canada To Get Funding For Research From Ice Bucket Challenge

    Justin Trudeau Treads Cautiously On Foreign Policy During First International Trip

    Justin Trudeau Treads Cautiously On Foreign Policy During First International Trip
    The front-page headline that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau awoke to on Friday in Manila before his return to Canada wasn't as fawning as others about him in the Philippines.

    Justin Trudeau Treads Cautiously On Foreign Policy During First International Trip

    Don't Let Concern Over Refugee Security Checks Mask Racism, Says Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne

    Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne says over-inflated national security concerns around the acceptance of Syrian refugees must not be used as a mask for racism.

    Don't Let Concern Over Refugee Security Checks Mask Racism, Says Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne