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Global Positioning System interferometric reflectometry (GPS-IR) measurements of ground surface elevation changes in permafrost areas in northern Canada

机译:全球定位系统干涉射线反射率(GPS-IR)加拿大北部多年冻土地区地面高度变化的测量

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Global Positioning System interferometric reflectometry (GPS-IR) is a relatively new technique which uses reflected GPS signals to measure surface elevation changes to study frozen-ground dynamics. At present, more than 200 GPS stations are operating continuously in the Northern Hemisphere permafrost areas, which were originally designed and maintained for tectonic and ionospheric studies. However, only one site in Utqia?vik, Alaska (formerly Barrow), was assessed to be usable for studying permafrost by GPS-IR. Moreover, GPS-IR has high requirements on the ground surface condition, which needs to be open, flat, and homogeneous. In this study, we screen three major GPS networks in Canada and identify 12 out of 38 stations located in permafrost areas as useful ones where reliable GPS-IR measurements can be obtained. We focus on the five Canadian Active Control System stations and obtain their daily GPS-IR surface elevation changes. We find that the ground surface subsided in Alert, Resolute Bay, and Repulse Bay respectively by 0.61±0.04cmyr?1 (2012–2018), 0.70±0.02cmyr?1 (2003–2014), and 0.26±0.05cmyr?1 (2014–2019). At the other two sites of Baker Lake and Iqaluit, the trends are not statistically significant. The linear trends of deformation were negatively correlated with those of thaw indices in Alert, Resolute Bay, and Repulse Bay. Furthermore, in Resolute Bay, we also find that the end-of-thaw elevations during 2003–2012 were highly negatively correlated with the square root of thaw indices. This study is the first one using multiple GPS stations to study permafrost by GPS-IR. It highlights the multiple useful GPS stations in northern Canada, offering multi-year, continuous, and daily GPS-IR surface deformation, which provides new insights into frozen-ground dynamics at various temporal scales and across a broad region.
机译:全球定位系统干涉式反射测量仪(GPS-IR)是一种相对较新的技术,它使用反射的GPS信号测量表面高度变化,以研究冻结地动态。目前,超过200个GPS站在北半球多年冻土区域持续运营,最初设计和维持构造和电离层研究。但是,在UTQIA的一个网站?Vik,阿拉斯加(前身只是Barrow),被评估可用于通过GPS-IR学习永久冻土。此外,GPS-IR对地面条件的要求高,需要开放,平坦和均匀。在这项研究中,我们在加拿大屏蔽了三个主要的GPS网络,并确定了在多冻地区的38个电台中的12个,作为可靠的GPS-IR测量的有用。我们专注于五个加拿大主动控制系统站,并获得日常GPS-IR表面高度变化。我们发现接地表面分别消除了警报,果断湾和拒绝托架0.61±0.04cmyr?1(2012-2018),0.70±0.02cmyr?1(2003-2014),0.26±0.05cmyr?1( 2014-2019)。在贝克湖和Iqaluit的另外两个地点,趋势没有统计学意义。变形的线性趋势与警报,果断湾和拒收湾的解冻指数呈负相关。此外,在腐败湾,我们还发现,2003 - 2012年的解冻升高与解冻指数的平方根高度负面相关。本研究是第一个使用多个GPS站进行GPS-IR学习Permafrost的人。它突出了加拿大北部的多个有用的GPS站,提供多年,连续和每日GPS-IR表面变形,这在各个时间秤和宽地区的冰冻地下动态提供了新的洞察力。

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