A Review of Abrupt Permafrost Thaw: Definitions, Usage, and a Proposed Conceptual Framework

Abstract

Permafrost thaw alters greenhouse gas emissions, soil and vegetation properties, and hydrologic flow, threatening infrastructure and the cultures and livelihoods of northern communities. The term ‘abrupt thaw’ has emerged in scientific discourse over the past two decades to differentiate processes that rapidly impact large depths of permafrost, such as thermokarst, from more gradual, top-down thaw processes that impact centimeters of near-surface permafrost over years to decades. However, there has been no formal definition for abrupt thaw and its use in the scientific literature has varied considerably. Our standardized definition of abrupt thaw offers a path forward to better understand drivers and patterns of abrupt thaw and its consequences for global greenhouse gas budgets, impacts to infrastructure and land-use, and Arctic policy- and decision-making.

Journal Article
Year of Publication
2025
Author
Journal
Current Climate Change Reports
Volume
11
DOI
10.1007/s40641-025-00204-3
Start Page
7
URL
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40641-025-00204-3
Download citation