Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Lake Falling Off Cliff Due To Permafrost Melt New Northwest Territories Normal: Scientist

The Canadian Press, 22 Jul, 2015 11:01 AM
    Some time in the next few months, a small northern lake will burst through the shrinking earthen rampart holding it back and fall off a cliff.
     
    "It's got a ways to travel," says Steve Kokelj of the Northwest Territories Geological Survey. "This lake happens to be perched about 600 feet above the Mackenzie Valley."
     
    It will be spectacular, but it won't be unique. Melting permafrost caused by climate change is causing changes in the northern landscape on a scale not seen since the end of the last ice age, says Kokelj.
     
    "It's changing the form of the landscape in ways that have not impacted this environment in the last several hundreds of thousands of years."
     
    The doomed lake, which has no name and sits in the northern corner of the territory 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 retreat of the Laurentide Ice Sheet 20,000 years ago.
     
    Trouble starts when parts of the headwalls are exposed by erosion from wind or rain. The ice melts, which causes the soil and rock on top to collapse. That exposes more ice, which also melts and extends the collapse, and the cycle keeps repeating.
     
    "It thaws in the summertime and will continue to work its way back upslope until you run out of ice or the headwall gets covered by sediment," Kokelj says. "The slumps chew their way upslope."
     
    The slumps have been getting bigger and bigger as rainfall in the area 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 that have washed loose millions of cubic metres of rubble.
     
    In a 2014 scientific journal, Kokelj estimated that the amount of land scarred by slumping and the area covered by debris have more than doubled since the late 1980s. Some slumps are as large as 40 hectares.
     
    "In the last 30 years the slumps are much bigger than they were in the past."  
     
    The slump that will eventually send the lake plummeting valleyward has been at work for most of a decade. It has eaten its way through much of the plateau on which the lake sits. Now just a few metres of land and unfrozen permafrost are holding the water back.
     
    Although the lake is only a couple of hectares in size and a few metres deep, it will send tens of thousands of cubic metres of water crashing down when the last bit of soil collapses.
     
    No homes or communities lie in the anticipated flood path, although the N.W.T. has issued a warning to steer clear.
     
    Cameras have been installed, Kokelj says.
     
    "We're just hoping the cameras don't get obliterated by the release of water."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    CSE Says Edward Snowden Leaks Eroding Spy Agency's Long-term Advantage Over Foes

    CSE Says Edward Snowden Leaks Eroding Spy Agency's Long-term Advantage Over Foes
    In newly released briefing notes, the Communications Security Establishment says Snowden's disclosures about CSE's intelligence capabilities and those of its allies "have a cumulative detrimental effect" on its operations.

    CSE Says Edward Snowden Leaks Eroding Spy Agency's Long-term Advantage Over Foes

    Saskatchewan Intervention Dogs Help Calm And Comfort Victims Of Crime

    Saskatchewan Intervention Dogs Help Calm And Comfort Victims Of Crime
    REGINA — After just three weeks on the job, Saskatchewan's first three certified intervention dogs are already helping victims of crime. Merlot is stationed in Regina, Kane in Moose Jaw and Beaumont in Estevan and Weyburn.

    Saskatchewan Intervention Dogs Help Calm And Comfort Victims Of Crime

    Ultra-Nationalist Regiment In Ukraine Won't Get Canadian Training, Says Kenney

    Ultra-Nationalist Regiment In Ukraine Won't Get Canadian Training, Says Kenney
    KYIV, Ukraine — Defence Minister Jason Kenney says the notorious ultra-nationalist Azov regiment will "absolutely" be excluded from the training Canadian military advisers are about to deliver in Ukraine.

    Ultra-Nationalist Regiment In Ukraine Won't Get Canadian Training, Says Kenney

    Government Protection For B.C.'s Glass Sponge Reefs Not Enough: Group

    Government Protection For B.C.'s Glass Sponge Reefs Not Enough: Group
    VICTORIA — Scientists say the discovery of glass sponge reefs once believed to be extinct in northern British Columbia's Hecate Strait is like finding a herd of dinosaurs roaming on land.

    Government Protection For B.C.'s Glass Sponge Reefs Not Enough: Group

    Conservatives Overrule Speaker, Force Final Vote On Controversial Labour Bill

    Conservatives Overrule Speaker, Force Final Vote On Controversial Labour Bill
    OTTAWA — Conservatives in the Senate have used their majority to overrule their own Speaker and force a final vote on a controversial labour bill.

    Conservatives Overrule Speaker, Force Final Vote On Controversial Labour Bill

    Surrey Rocked By Gunfire Again, Two Men Shot

    Surrey Rocked By Gunfire Again, Two Men Shot
    At least two people were taken to hospital after an overnight shooting on Iona Place near 123A Street in Surrey, B.C.

    Surrey Rocked By Gunfire Again, Two Men Shot