Permafrost-affected gleyzems of the Subpolar Urals: morphological and cryogenic structure, temperature regime and physical-chemical properties

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Abstract

The article studies the structure and properties of permafrost-affected gleyzems and peat-gleyzems in the tundra landscapes of the Subpolar Urals, the southernmost mineral soils with insular permafrost that is particularly sensitive to present-day climate change. The study examines in detail the morphological and cryogenic structure, temperature regime, mineralogical composition, and physical-chemical properties of active layer and underlying permafrost. The thin active layer is characterized by the predominance of peat horizons and significant gleyization of mineral horizons; a high-ice transition layer is localized in the upper permafrost. Massive cryogenic textures were revealed in the active layer, and schlieren and ataxic textures were found in the underlying permafrost. Peat-gleyzem, in contrast to the colder gleyzem, is characterized by a relatively mild temperature regime, which is explained by the increased thickness of the heat-insulating peat horizon and a greater depth of snow cover. Permafrost-affected soils of the Subpolar Urals are confined to climate-driven ecosystem-modified permafrost. It was revealed that the predominance of the coarse silt fraction in soils with close underlying permafrost contributes to the significant thixotropy of gleyed active layer. Cryogenic-lithological heterogeneity of profiles in the conditions of the subarctic humid climate of the mountainous country determines the specific structure and properties of gley permafrost-affected soils of the Subpolar Urals.

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E. V. Zhangurov

Institute of Biology of the Komi Scientific Center of the Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences

Author for correspondence.
Email: zhan.e@mail.ru
ORCID iD: 0000-0002-4297-7536
Russian Federation, Syktyvkar

D. A. Kaverin

Institute of Biology of the Komi Scientific Center of the Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences

Email: zhan.e@mail.ru
ORCID iD: 0000-0003-2559-2340
Russian Federation, Syktyvkar

A. A. Dymov

Institute of Biology of the Komi Scientific Center of the Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences

Email: zhan.e@mail.ru
ORCID iD: 0000-0002-1284-082X
Russian Federation, Syktyvkar

V. V. Startsev

Institute of Biology of the Komi Scientific Center of the Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences

Email: zhan.e@mail.ru
ORCID iD: 0000-0002-6425-6502
Russian Federation, Syktyvkar

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2. Fig. 1. Research objects.

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3. Fig. 2. Morphological structure of gley permafrost soils of the Subpolar Urals.

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4. Fig. 3. Cryogenic structure of gley permafrost soils of the Subpolar Urals: (a) – section 25-C, (b) – section 7.

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5. Fig. 4. Mineralogical composition of sandy fractions of soils: (a) – section 25-C, (b) – section 7.

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6. Fig. 5. Morphology of grains of various minerals (scanning electron microscope) from the lower horizons of the seasonally thawed layer, section 7: (a) – surface of a grain of “growth” of hematite and mica, (b) – cracking and separation of a fragment of hematite, (c) – cracking of epidote, (d) – section of highly weathered surface of acidic plagioclase with etching cavities.

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