Publications

Displaying 41 - 60 of 66
By year of publication, then alphabetical by title
  1. Harp, D. R., et al. “Effect Of Soil Property Uncertainties On Permafrost Thaw Projections: A Calibration-Constrained Analysis”. The Cryosphere, 2016, pp. 341 - 358.
  2. Yang, Z., et al. “Effects Of Warming On The Degradation And Production Of Low-Molecular-Weight Labile Organic Carbon In An Arctic Tundra Soil”. Soil Biology And Biochemistry, 2016, pp. 202 - 211.
  3. 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.
  4. Iwahana, G., et al. “Geomorphological And Geochemistry Changes In Permafrost After The 2002 Tundra Wildfire In Kougarok, Seward Peninsula, Alaska”. Journal Of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface, 2016, pp. 1697 - 1715.
  5. Dafflon, B., et al. “Geophysical Estimation Of Shallow Permafrost Distribution And Properties In An Ice-Wedge Polygon-Dominated Arctic Tundra Region”. Geophysics, 2016, pp. WA247 - WA263.
  6. Atchley, A. L., et al. “Influences And Interactions Of Inundation, Peat, And Snow On Active Layer Thickness”. Geophysical Research Letters, 2016, pp. 5116-5123.
  7. Iwahana, G., et al. “Insar Detection And Field Evidence For Thermokarst After A Tundra Wildfire, Using Alos-Palsar”. Remote Sensing, 2016, p. 218.
  8. Painter, S. L., et al. “Integrated Surface/Subsurface Permafrost Thermal Hydrology: Model Formulation And Proof-Of-Concept Simulations”. Water Resources Research, 2016, pp. 6062-6077.
  9. 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.
  10. Coon, E. T., et al. “Managing Complexity In Simulations Of Land Surface And Near-Surface Processes”. Environmental Modelling & Software, 2016, pp. 134 - 149.
  11. Langford, Z. L., et al. “Mapping Arctic Plant Functional Type Distributions In The Barrow Environmental Observatory Using Worldview-2 And Lidar Datasets”. Remote Sensing, 2016, p. 733.
  12. Kumar, J., et al. “Modeling The Spatiotemporal Variability In Subsurface Thermal Regimes Across A Low-Relief Polygonal Tundra Landscape”. The Cryosphere, 2016, pp. 2241 - 2274.
  13. Liljedahl, A. K., et al. “Pan-Arctic Ice-Wedge Degradation In Warming Permafrost And Its Influence On Tundra Hydrology”. Nature Geoscience, 2016.
  14. Mackelprang, R., et al. “Permafrost Meta-Omics And Climate Change”. Annual Review Of Earth And Planetary Sciences, 2016, pp. 439-462.
  15. Schädel, C., et al. “Potential Carbon Emissions Dominated By Carbon Dioxide From Thawed Permafrost Soils”. Nature Climate Change, 2016, pp. 950 - 953.
  16. Dafflon, B., et al. “Quantification Of Arctic Soil And Permafrost Properties Using Ground Penetrating Radar”. 2016 16Th International Conference On Ground Penetrating Radar (Gpr) , 2016.
  17. Ghimire, B., et al. “Representing Leaf And Root Physiological Traits In Clm Improves Global Carbon And Nitrogen Cycling Predictions”. Journal Of Advances In Modeling Earth Systems, 2016, pp. 598 - 613.
  18. Xu, X., et al. “Reviews And Syntheses: Four Decades Of Modeling Methane Cycling In Terrestrial Ecosystems”. Biogeosciences, 2016, pp. 3735 - 3755.
  19. Zhu, Q., et al. “Root Traits Explain Observed Tundra Vegetation Nitrogen Uptake Patterns: Implications For Trait-Based Land Models”. Journal Of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences, 2016, pp. 3101 - 3112.
  20. Cable, W. L., et al. “Scaling-Up Permafrost Thermal Measurements In Western Alaska Using An Ecotype Approach”. The Cryosphere, 2016, pp. 2517 - 2532.