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Review

Ice Jam Flooding of the Drying Peace-Athabasca Delta: Hindsight on the Accuracy of the Traditional Knowledge and Historical Flood Record

by
Spyros Beltaos
Watershed Hydrology and Ecology Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada, Canada Centre for Inland Waters, 867 Lakeshore Rd., Burlington, ON L7S 1A1, Canada
Environments 2025, 12(10), 376; https://doi.org/10.3390/environments12100376 (registering DOI)
Submission received: 25 August 2025 / Revised: 23 September 2025 / Accepted: 9 October 2025 / Published: 13 October 2025

Abstract

The Peace-Athabasca Delta (PAD) in northern Alberta, Canada, is one of the world’s largest inland freshwater deltas and is largely located within the Wood Buffalo National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Owing to its ecological and socioeconomic significance, the PAD has been designated a Ramsar wetland of international importance. A paucity of large-scale Peace River ice jam flooding and concurrent drying trend during the past five decades has motivated various studies on relevant processes and on possible remedial action. In turn, many of these studies are informed by a flood record that was compiled in 1995, based on Historical information and Traditional Knowledge (H-TK flood record). Later work has expressed occasional reservations regarding the accuracy of this record, while much more is now known about the physical and hydroclimatic controls of PAD ice jams. This paper examines the 20th century portion of the H-TK record in the light of recent scientific advances made since the 1990s and of a wealth of hydrometric and climatic indicators, along with eyewitness corroborations, that extend back to the early 1900s. Systematic observational data and monitoring reports that have become available since the 1990s have also provided valuable documentation of PAD flooding. It is concluded that the record of major ice-jam floods is reliable, while the possibility of “missed” events cannot be precluded. The record of minor ice jam floods, which is largely inferred from reversed tributary flows entering Lake Athabasca, may not be reliable because more than half of the reported events might not have occurred at all. The value of the H-TK record is primarily in the major events, which generate overland inundation and can amply recharge various ponds, lakes, and wetlands of the PAD. Implications of the results for pre- and post-regulation flood frequencies and for future park management are discussed.
Keywords: breakup; flood record; historical record; ice jam; large flood; lesser flood; Peace-Athabasca Delta; traditional record breakup; flood record; historical record; ice jam; large flood; lesser flood; Peace-Athabasca Delta; traditional record

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MDPI and ACS Style

Beltaos, S. Ice Jam Flooding of the Drying Peace-Athabasca Delta: Hindsight on the Accuracy of the Traditional Knowledge and Historical Flood Record. Environments 2025, 12, 376. https://doi.org/10.3390/environments12100376

AMA Style

Beltaos S. Ice Jam Flooding of the Drying Peace-Athabasca Delta: Hindsight on the Accuracy of the Traditional Knowledge and Historical Flood Record. Environments. 2025; 12(10):376. https://doi.org/10.3390/environments12100376

Chicago/Turabian Style

Beltaos, Spyros. 2025. "Ice Jam Flooding of the Drying Peace-Athabasca Delta: Hindsight on the Accuracy of the Traditional Knowledge and Historical Flood Record" Environments 12, no. 10: 376. https://doi.org/10.3390/environments12100376

APA Style

Beltaos, S. (2025). Ice Jam Flooding of the Drying Peace-Athabasca Delta: Hindsight on the Accuracy of the Traditional Knowledge and Historical Flood Record. Environments, 12(10), 376. https://doi.org/10.3390/environments12100376

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