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Glacies, Volume 3, Issue 2 (June 2026) – 1 article

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13 pages, 6293 KB  
Article
Observing Seasonal Thaw in Alaskan Permafrost Using Surface-Deployed Distributed Acoustic Sensing
by Constantine G. Coclin, Meghan C. L. Quinn, Adrian K. Doran, Gopu R. Potty, Thomas A. Douglas, Heath A. Turner and Levi J. Cass
Glacies 2026, 3(2), 6; https://doi.org/10.3390/glacies3020006 - 20 May 2026
Abstract
Permafrost extent and active layer thickness (ALT) have implications for polar-region infrastructure and communities. Much of the world’s permafrost is rich in ground ice and can become highly unstable during seasonal freeze–thaw cycling. Monitoring these dynamics is critical for quantifying infrastructure risk, informing [...] Read more.
Permafrost extent and active layer thickness (ALT) have implications for polar-region infrastructure and communities. Much of the world’s permafrost is rich in ground ice and can become highly unstable during seasonal freeze–thaw cycling. Monitoring these dynamics is critical for quantifying infrastructure risk, informing new construction, and prioritizing essential repairs of existing infrastructure. Fiber optic distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) offers an alternative, providing high-resolution monitoring over large distances. This proof-of-concept study evaluates a surface-deployed DAS cable as a rapid, nondestructive tool for observing seasonal thaw in discontinuous permafrost in Fox, Alaska. During three field campaigns (May 2024, September 2024, and June 2025), a surface laid cable recorded active source sledgehammer strikes. Dispersion curves extracted from the surface wave data were aligned with theoretical curves using a simplified two-layer forward model, representing a seasonally thawed layer overlying hard frozen ground. Based on best fit estimates derived from this model, the active layer thickness was calculated at approximately 0.8 m in May 2024, thickening to 1.9 m in September 2024, and 0.65 m in June 2025. These results demonstrate that surface-deployed DAS can effectively observe changes in permafrost seasonal thaw. This technique could be used prior-to and/or in-addition-to performing more invasive, time-consuming subsurface investigation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Current Snow Science Research 2025–2026)
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