Publications by Author

Authors who are active project participants

  • Joel C. Rowland

    2021

    • Glade, R. C., et al. “Arctic Soil Patterns Analogous To Fluid Instabilities”. Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences, 2021.

    2017

    • Shelef, E., et al. “Large Uncertainty In Permafrost Carbon Stocks Due To Hillslope Soil Deposits”. Geophysical Research Letters, 2017, pp. 6134-6144.

    2016

    • Harp, D. R., et al. “Effect Of Soil Property Uncertainties On Permafrost Thaw Projections: A Calibration-Constrained Analysis”. The Cryosphere, 2016, pp. 341 - 358.
    • Rowland, J. C., and E. T. Coon. “From Documentation To Prediction: How Remote Sensing And Mechanistic Modeling Are Raising The Bar For Thermokarst Research.”. Hydrogeology Journal, 2016, pp. 645 - 648.

    2014

    • Gangodagamage, C., et al. “Extrapolating Active Layer Thickness Measurements Across Arctic Polygonal Terrain Using Lidar And Ndvi Data Sets”. Water Resources Research, 2014, pp. 6339 - 6357.
    • Moody, D. I., et al. “Land Cover Classification In Multispectral Imagery Using Clustering Of Sparse Approximations Over Learned Feature Dictionaries”. Journal Of Applied Remote Sensing, 2014, p. 084793.

    2013

    • Skurikhin, A. N., et al. “Arctic Tundra Ice-Wedge Landscape Characterization By Active Contours Without Edges And Structural Analysis Using High-Resolution Satellite Imagery”. Remote Sensing Letters, 2013, pp. 1077 - 1086.
    • Hubbard, S. S., et al. “Quantifying And Relating Land-Surface And Subsurface Variability In Permafrost Environments Using Lidar And Surface Geophysical Datasets”. Hydrogeology Journal, 2013, pp. 149 - 169.

    2012

    • Lewis, K. C., et al. “Drainage Subsidence Associated With Arctic Permafrost Degradation”. Journal Of Geophysical Research, 2012.

    2011

    • Rowland, J. C., et al. “The Role Of Advective Heat Transport In Talik Development Beneath Lakes And Ponds In Discontinuous Permafrost”. Geophysical Research Letters, 2011.

    2010

    • Rowland, J. C., et al. “Arctic Landscapes In Transition: Responses To Thawing Permafrost”. Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union, 2010, p. 229.
  • Margaret S. Torn

    2021

    • Mekonnen, Z. A., et al. “Arctic Tundra Shrubification: A Review Of Mechanisms And Impacts On Ecosystem Carbon Balance”. Environmental Research Letters, 2021, p. 053001.
    • Wainwright, H. M., et al. “High-Resolution Spatio-Temporal Estimation Of Net Ecosystem Exchange In Ice-Wedge Polygon Tundra Using In Situ Sensors And Remote Sensing Data”. Land, 2021, p. 722.
    • Dengel, S., et al. “Influence Of Tundra Polygon Type And Climate Variability On Carbon Dioxide And Methane Fluxes Near Utqiagvik, Alaska”. Journal Of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences, 2021.
    • Watts, J. D., et al. “Soil Respiration Strongly Offsets Carbon Uptake In Alaska And Northwest Canada”. Environmental Research Letters, 2021, p. 084051.
    • Virkkala, A. -M., et al. “Statistical Upscaling Of Ecosystem Carbon Dioxide Fluxes Across The Terrestrial Tundra And Boreal Domain: Regional Patterns And Uncertainties”. Global Change Biology, 2021, pp. 4040 - 4059.

    2020

    • Lehmann, J., et al. “Persistence Of Soil Organic Carbon Caused By Functional Complexity”. Nature Geoscience, 2020, pp. 529 - 534.

    2019

    • Arora, B., et al. “Evaluating Temporal Controls On Greenhouse Gas (Ghg) Fluxes In An Arctic Tundra Environment: An Entropy-Based Approach”. Science Of The Total Environment, 2019, pp. 284 - 299.
    • Wang, Y., et al. “Mechanistic Modeling Of Microtopographic Impacts On Carbon Dioxide And Methane Fluxes In An Alaskan Tundra Ecosystem Using The Clm‐Microbe Model”. Journal Of Advances In Modeling Earth Systems, 2019, p. 17.
    • Grant, R. F., et al. “Modeling Climate Change Impacts On An Arctic Polygonal Tundra: 2. Changes In Carbon Dioxide And Methane Exchange Depend On Rates Of Permafrost Thaw As Affected By Changes In Vegetation And Drainage”. Journal Of Geophysicalresearch: Biogeosciences, 2019, pp. 1323 - 1341.

    2018

    • Taş, N., et al. “Landscape Topography Structures The Soil Microbiome In Arctic Polygonal Tundra”. Nature Communications, 2018.

    2017

    • Raz-Yaseef, N., et al. “Evapotranspiration Across Plant Types And Geomorphological Units In Polygonal Arctic Tundra”. Journal Of Hydrology, 2017, pp. 816-825.
    • Raz-Yaseef, N., et al. “Large Carbon Dioxide And Methane Emissions From Polygonal Tundra During Spring Thaw In Northern Alaska”. Geophysical Research Letters, 2017, pp. 504 - 513.
    • Grant, R. F., et al. “Mathematical Modeling Of Arctic Polygonal Tundra With Ecosys: 1. Microtopography Determines How Active Layer Depths Respond To Changes In Temperature And Precipitation”. Journal Of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences, 2017, pp. 3161-3173.
    • Grant, R. F., et al. “Mathematical Modeling Of Arctic Polygonal Tundra With Ecosys: 2. Microtopography Determines How Carbon Dioxide And Methane Exchange Responds To Changes In Temperature And Precipitation”. Journal Of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences, 2017, pp. 3174-3187.
    • Dwivedi, D., et al. “Mineral Properties, Microbes, Transport, And Plant-Input Profiles Control Vertical Distribution And Age Of Soil Carbon Stocks”. Soil Biology And Biochemistry, 2017, pp. 244 - 259.

    2016

    • Xu, X., et al. “A Multi-Scale Comparison Of Modeled And Observed Seasonal Methane Emissions In Northern Wetlands”. Biogeosciences, 2016, pp. 5043 - 5056.
    • Vaughn, L. J. S., et al. “Isotopic Insights Into Methane Production, Oxidation, And Emissions In Arctic Polygon Tundra”. Global Change Biology, 2016, pp. 3487 - 3502.

    2015

    • Wainwright, H. M., et al. “Identifying Multiscale Zonation And Assessing The Relative Importance Of Polygon Geomorphology On Carbon Fluxes In An Arctic Tundra Ecosystem”. Journal Of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences, 2015, pp. 788 - 808.
    • Throckmorton, H. M., et al. “Pathways And Transformations Of Dissolved Methane And Dissolved Inorganic Carbon In Arctic Tundra Watersheds: Evidence From Analysis Of Stable Isotopes”. Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 2015, pp. 1893 - 1910.

    2014

    • Riley, W. J., et al. “Long Residence Times Of Rapidly Decomposable Soil Organic Matter: Application Of A Multi-Phase, Multi-Component, And Vertically Resolved Model (Bams1) To Soil Carbon Dynamics”. Geoscientific Model Development, 2014, pp. 1335 - 1355.