Articles | Volume 14, issue 2
https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-14-497-2020
https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-14-497-2020
Research article
 | 
07 Feb 2020
Research article |  | 07 Feb 2020

Pan-Antarctic map of near-surface permafrost temperatures at 1 km2 scale

Jaroslav Obu, Sebastian Westermann, Gonçalo Vieira, Andrey Abramov, Megan Ruby Balks, Annett Bartsch, Filip Hrbáček, Andreas Kääb, and Miguel Ramos
Abstract

Permafrost is present within almost all of the Antarctic's ice-free areas, but little is known about spatial variations in permafrost temperatures except for a few areas with established ground temperature measurements. We modelled a temperature at the top of the permafrost (TTOP) for all the ice-free areas of the Antarctic mainland and Antarctic islands at 1 km2 resolution during 2000–2017. The model was driven by remotely sensed land surface temperatures and downscaled ERA-Interim climate reanalysis data, and subgrid permafrost variability was simulated by variable snow cover. The results were validated against in situ-measured ground temperatures from 40 permafrost boreholes, and the resulting root-mean-square error was 1.9 C. The lowest near-surface permafrost temperature of −36C was modelled at Mount Markham in the Queen Elizabeth Range in the Transantarctic Mountains. This is the lowest permafrost temperature on Earth, according to global-scale modelling results. The temperatures were most commonly modelled between −23 and −18C for mountainous areas rising above the Antarctic Ice Sheet and between −14 and −8C for coastal areas. The model performance was good where snow conditions were modelled realistically, but errors of up to 4 C occurred at sites with strong wind-driven redistribution of snow.

Dates
1 Introduction

Permafrost in the Antarctic is present beneath all ice-free terrain, except for the lowest elevations of the maritime Antarctic and sub-Antarctic islands (Vieira et al., 2010). Ice- and snow-free land occupies 0.22 % (30 900 km2) of Antarctica (Burton-Johnson et al., 2016; Hrbáček et al., 2018). Major ice-free areas include Queen Maud Land, Enderby Land, the Vestfold Hills, Wilkes Land, the Transantarctic Mountains, the Ellsworth Mountains, Marie Byrd Land and the Antarctic Peninsula (Greene et al., 1967; Fig. 1). Despite the relatively small area, in comparison to glaciated areas, permafrost is one of the major factors controlling terrestrial ecosystem dynamics in the Antarctic (Bockheim et al., 2008).

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Figure 1Overview map of the ice-free Antarctic regions and extents of the maps presented in the paper. The ice-free areas are shown according to percentage of MODIS LST measurements in the combined MODIS ERA surface temperature product. Background topography, on this and all following maps, is from the Quantarctica 3 database (Roth et al., 2017).

Compared with the Northern Hemisphere, where the first permafrost investigations date back to the 19th century (Shiklomanov, 2005; Humlum et al., 2003), the ground temperatures in the Antarctic have been systematically studied only during the last 2 decades. Permafrost was studied in relation to patterned ground since the 1960s and during the Dry Valley Drilling Project in the 1970s, but temperatures have been measured only occasionally (Decker and Bucher, 1977; Guglielmin, 2012). The first Antarctic permafrost borehole network was implemented in 1999 in Victoria Land (Transantarctic Mountains) and was extended during the International Polar Year 2007–2009 to cover all eight major ice-free regions (Vieira et al., 2010).

Permafrost distribution was estimated and mapped on the Antarctic Peninsula by Bockheim et al. (2013) based on mean annual temperature, periglacial features, shallow excavations, borehole measurements, geophysical surveys and existing permafrost models. Bockheim et al. (2007) characterised permafrost in the McMurdo Dry Valleys based on ground ice properties and active-layer thickness from more than 800 shallow excavations.

Antarctic permafrost modelling efforts were limited to small areas in the Antarctic Peninsula region and sub-Antarctic islands. Ferreira et al. (2017) modelled freezing indices and the temperature at the top of the permafrost (TTOP) for eight monitored sites on the Hurd Peninsula and Livingston Island for the 2007 and 2009 seasons to study the controlling factors of ground temperatures. Rocha et al. (2010) ran the H-TESSEL scheme forced by ERA-Interim reanalysis to simulate ground temperatures at Reina Sofía Peak on Livingston Island. Ground temperature measurements and permafrost modelling efforts have been limited to point sites, and little is known about spatial variability in ground temperatures at the regional and continent-wide scales.

In this study we employed the TTOP modelling scheme based on the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) land surface temperature (LST) and ERA-Interim reanalysis to model the spatial distribution of temperatures at the top of permafrost on all ice-free areas of Antarctica and the Antarctic islands. We adapted the existing modelling scheme from the Northern Hemisphere (Westermann et al., 2015; Obu et al., 2019a) according to the available input data and their characteristics for the Antarctic.

2 Methods

2.1 The CryoGrid 1 model

The CryoGrid 1 model (Gisnås et al., 2013) calculates the mean annual ground temperature (MAGT) and is based on the TTOP equilibrium approach (Smith and Riseborough, 1996):

(1) MAGT = 1 τ n f FDDs + r k n t TDDs for n f FDDs + r k n t TDDs 0 , 1 τ 1 r k n f FDDs + n t TDDs for n f FDDs + r k n t TDDs > 0 ,

where FDDs represents freezing degree days, and TDDs represents thawing degree days in the surface meteorological forcing accumulated over the model period τ (in days). The influence of seasonal snow cover, vegetation and ground thermal properties was taken into account by the semi-empirical adjustment factors rk (ratio of thermal conductivity of the active layer in thawed and frozen state), nf (scaling factor between average winter surface and ground surface temperature) and nt (scaling factor between average summer surface and ground surface temperature). We use land surface temperature (LST) to compute FDDs and TDDs (see following section) instead of the air temperature that was used initially by Smith and Riseborough (2002) and hence omit the thawing nt factors.

2.2 Freezing and thawing degree days

Spatially distributed datasets of TDDs and FDDs were compiled from remotely sensed land surface temperature products and climate reanalysis data following the procedure of Obu et al. (2019a). We used LST data (level 3 product in processing version 6) from MODIS aboard the Terra and Aqua satellites, which contain up to two daytime and two night-time measurements per day at a spatial resolution of 1 km starting in the year 2000 (Wan, 2014). For this reason, the study extends from 2000 to the end of 2017. Data gaps in the MODIS LST time series due to cloud cover can result in a systematic cold bias in seasonal averages (Westerman et al., 2012; Soliman et al., 2012; Østby et al., 2014), so a gap filling with near-surface air temperatures from the ERA-Interim and ERA-5 reanalysis was applied (Westermann et al., 2015).

The ERA-Interim reanalysis provides gap-free meteorological data from 1979 onwards at a spatial resolution of 0.75×0.75 (Dee et al., 2011). The ERA-5 reanalysis is an ERA-Interim upgrade and provides the data at improved 0.28125×0.28125 (31 km) spatial resolution but was, at the time of the study, available only from 2008 onwards (Hersbach and Dee, 2016). ERA-Interim data were, for this reason, used before 2008, and ERA-5 data were used afterwards. The reanalysis data were downscaled to the 1 km resolution of individual MODIS pixels using atmospheric lapse rates and the Global Multi-resolution Terrain Elevation Data 2010 (GMTED2010; Danielson and Gesch, 2011). The downscaling methodology was described in detail by Fiddes and Gruber (2014), Westermann et al. (2015), and Obu et al. (2019a). The gap-filled MODIS LST time series were averaged to 8 d periods from which FDDs and TDDs were finally accumulated for the 2000–2017 study period.

2.3 Average annual snowfall and nf factors

Spatially distributed datasets of nf factors were generated from average annual snowfall forced by ERA-Interim and ERA-5 reanalysed data. Snow cover in the majority of the Antarctic is dominated by sublimation and processes related to blowing snow (Gallée, 1998; Bintanja and Reijmer, 2001), which were not taken in to account by the snowfall and degree-day model that Obu et al. (2019a) used to estimate the nf factor for the Northern Hemisphere. Thus, only mean annual snowfall was calculated using the downscaled ERA-Interim precipitation data from before 2008 and the ERA-5 precipitation after 2008. Precipitation was downscaled based on the difference between reanalysis elevation data and GMTED2010 data using a precipitation gradient, found in drier areas (Hevesi et al., 1992), of 2 % per 100 m up to 1000 m and 1 % per 100 m for elevations above 1000 m. Snowfall was defined as precipitation at air temperatures below 0 C, using the downscaled ERA-Interim air temperatures as employed for the gap filling of MODIS LST (see above). For a detailed downscaling procedure description, see Obu et al. (2019a).

Nf factors were defined based on average annual snowfall; however the reported nf factors in Antarctica were calculated with respect to snow depth. Oliva et al. (2017) identified nf factor values of around 0.3 for snow accumulations of 80 cm on Livingston Island, although the nf factors can increase to 0.55 in the same accumulations due to their temporal variability (de Pablo et al., 2017). Nf factors close to, or even greater than, 1 were measured in areas with little or no snow cover on Vesleskarvet nunatak (Kotzé and Meiklejohn, 2017), in the McMurdo Dry Valleys (Lacelle et al., 2016) and on James Ross Island (Hrbáček et al., 2016). This range was used to constrain the nf factor ranges in relation to average annual snowfall (Table 1). Since the snow model was not able to simulate snow-free sites, nor snowdrifts, due to strong wind distribution, we used a maximum nf factor of 0.95 and a minimum of 0.3. However, smaller snow-depth variations on a local scale were taken into account, with an ensemble of different values of mean annual snowfall for each 1 km2 pixel (e.g. Gisnås et al., 2014).

Table 1Ranges of nf factors that were assigned to mean annual snowfall values.

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2.4rk factors

The rk factor is defined as the ratio of thawed and frozen thermal conductivities of the active-layer material (Romanovsky and Osterkamp, 1995) and is related to water and organic matter contents (e.g. Gisnås et al., 2013). Soil moisture properties were mapped on a regional scale (Bockheim et al., 2007), but no pan-Antarctic datasets related to soil water or organic contents were available. The ESA CCI Land Cover that Obu et al. (2019a) used for the Northern Hemisphere study contains only a “permanent snow and ice” class on the Antarctic mainland; therefore, a rock outcrop dataset (Burton-Johnson et al., 2016) was used to constrain non-glaciated areas. An rk factor of 0.85 was used for the whole of the Antarctic, representing an average value between very dry sites on continental Antarctica and moderately moist sites on the Antarctic Peninsula.

2.5 Ensemble-based modelling of subpixel heterogeneity

Ground temperatures can vary considerably at short distances due to heterogeneous snow cover, vegetation, topography and soil properties (Beer, 2016; Gisnås et al., 2014, 2016; Zhang et al., 2014). We ran an ensemble of 200 model realisations with different combinations of nf and rk factors to simulate the variability. Rk factor values were drawn randomly from a uniform distribution to vary by ±0.1 between 0.75 and 0.95 to represent both very dry sites and locations with higher soil moisture. The distribution of snowfall within the 1 km pixel was simulated using a log-normal distribution function where mean annual snowfall determined the mean of the distribution. The coefficient of variation in the distribution for the open areas (0.9) according to Liston (2004) was assigned to all modelled areas. An nf factor was assigned to the estimated average annual snowfall according to Table 1. The pixels not overlapping with rock outcrops were masked out. A fraction of the model runs, with MAGT <0C, was used to derive the permafrost type (zone) on Antarctic islands (see Obu et al., 2019a, for detailed description).

2.6 Model validation

We compared our results to available in situ measurements in 40 permafrost boreholes and shallow boreholes at soil-climate stations. The ensemble mean of modelled MAGTs was compared to the borehole measurements to take the simulated spatial variability, provided by the ensemble spread, into account. The accuracy of the model was estimated, with root-mean-square error (RMSE) and mean absolute error, between the modelled and measured MAGT.

The validation data were provided by the authors for the McMurdo Dry Valleys, ice-free areas near Russian stations (Bunger Hills, Schirmacher Hills, Larsemann Hills, Thala Hills, King George Island and Hobs Coast) and the northern Antarctic Peninsula. Ground temperatures from these locations represent mean MAGT at the top of the permafrost and usually overlap well with the modelling period 2000–2017 (Appendix A). Validation data for Queen Maud Land (Troll Station, Flårjuven Bluff and Vesleskarvet) and the Baker Rocks site were obtained from Hrbáček et al. (2018), and MAGTs from Terra Nova Bay (Oasi New and Boulder Clay) were obtained from Vieira et al. (2010). MAGTs from Hope Bay, Mount Dolence, the Marble Point borehole and Limnopolar Lake were obtained from Schaefer et al. (2017a, b), Guglielmin et al. (2011) and de Pablo et al. (2014), respectively. The borehole data from Signy Island and Rothera Point were extracted from Guglielmin et al. (2012, 2014). The data reported in publications were not necessarily calculated for the top of the permafrost and do not completely overlap with the modelling period and are, thus, less reliable than the author-supplied validation data. For instance, the data from Vieira et al. (2010) represent MAGT for the periods before 2010, usually lasting only few years (Table A1).

3 Results

3.1 Comparison to borehole measurements

Ground temperatures can vary significantly inside a 1 km2 model pixel, which is, to a certain extent, represented by the TTOP model ensemble runs. Average MAGT derived from the ensemble runs was compared to the measured site ground temperatures, which might limit representativeness for sites with locally specific ground and snow properties. The comparison yielded a RMSE of 1.94 C and a mean absolute error for all boreholes of −0.17C (Fig. 2). The small mean absolute error is partly achieved with fine adjustment of the nf factor class limits. For 50 % of the boreholes, the agreement between borehole temperatures and modelled MAGT was better than 1 C, while it is better than 2 C for 75 % and better than 3 C for 85 % of the boreholes. Assuming a Gaussian distribution of standard deviation σMAGT, 68 % of borehole comparisons should fall within 1 σMAGT, while 95 % falls within 3 σMAGT, and 99 % should be within 3 σMAGT. For the comparison with Antarctic boreholes, 18 (45 %) boreholes were contained within 1, 29 (73 %) within 2 and 31 (78 %) within 3 standard deviations from the mean, which is comparable to the results for the Northern Hemisphere (Obu et al., 2019a).

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Figure 2Measured vs. modelled permafrost temperatures for all boreholes. The dashed lines represent ±2C intervals around the 1 : 1 solid line.

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3.2 Queen Maud Land

There are 2430 km2 of ice-free areas in Queen Maud Land according to the rock outcrop map (Burton-Johnson et al., 2016; Hrbáček et al., 2018). The average MAGT is −18.2C, and it ranges from −26.2C in the highest parts of the Fimbulheimen Range to −6.3C on the Prince Olav Coast, where MAGTs down to −10C were modelled at elevations exceeding 200 m (Fig. 3). MAGTs above −10C can be found also at the Schirmacher Oasis (Hills) and reach above −8C. MAGTs in the Sør Rondane Mountains and in the Fimbulheimen Range range from −12C at elevations of around 800 m a.s.l. to −24C at elevations exceeding 3000 m a.s.l. The Kirwan Escarpment (elevations usually exceeding 2000 m) is characterised by MAGTs between −23 and −20C, and in the Heimefront Range (with slightly lower elevations) the MAGTs were between −22 and −18C. MAGTs were modelled as being from −21 to −17C on the Borg Massif and between −16 and −12C on the Ahlmann Ridge.

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Figure 3Permafrost temperature maps of Queen Maud Land and differences between borehole and modelled MAGT. Legends, scale and north arrow are valid for both panels. See Fig. 1 for location of panels (a) and (b).

3.3 Enderby Land

Permafrost occupies 1140 km2 of ice-free area in Enderby Land, which is predominantly mountaintops and a few coastal sites. The modelled average MAGT was −11.7C, ranging from −22.4C, on summits exceeding 2000 m elevation, to −6.3C in the north-western part of the coast (Fig. 4). The MAGT was modelled as being around −8C along the majority of the coast and around −10C in the coastal areas of the Nye, Scott and Tula mountains, dropping below −15C at elevations exceeding 1000 m a.s.l. In the Framnes Mountains, MAGT was modelled at between −17 and −12C.

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Figure 4Permafrost temperature maps of Enderby Land and differences between borehole and modelled MAGT. Legends, scale and north arrow are valid for both panels. See Fig. 1 for location of panels (a) and (b).

3.4 Vestfold Hills

The ice-free area of the Vestfold Hills region is 2750 km2. The modelling showed an average MAGT of −17.4C in this region. The MAGT ranged from −6.6C on the islands of the Ingrid Christensen Coast to −28.3C in the highest parts of the Prince Charles Mountains (Fig. 5). The MAGT in Amery Oasis, which is a part of the Prince Charles Mountains, was modelled as −13C, in the lowest-lying areas, down to −18C at elevations approaching 1000 m a.s.l. At similar elevations on the Mawson Escarpment, significantly lower MAGTs, from −19C at 200 m a.s.l down to −24C at 1500 m a.s.l, were recognised. In the coastal lowland areas of the Larsemann and Vestfold Hills the MAGT ranged between −10 to −7C.

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Figure 5Permafrost temperature map of the Vestfold Hills and differences between borehole and modelled MAGT.

3.5 Wilkes Land

The majority of the 400 km2 of ice-free area in Wilkes Land lies in the area surrounding the Bunger Hills, where MAGTs of around −9C were modelled close to the Shackleton Ice Shelf. The lowest MAGT of −15.9C was modelled on the adjacent mountains at 1300 m elevation (Fig. 6). Modelled MAGTs were −8 to −6C at the Budd Coast, −8C at the Adélie Coast and −10 to −11C at the George V Coast. Due to the prevalence of low-lying regions the mean MAGT of the region was only −8.9C.

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Figure 6Permafrost temperature maps of Wilkes Land and differences between borehole and modelled MAGT. See Fig. 1 for location.

3.6 Transantarctic Mountains

The Transantarctic Mountains are the largest ice-free region, comprising 19 750 km2 and extending from Cape Adare to Coats Land. The part west of the 90 meridian (Fig. 7) consists of mountain ranges mostly lower than 2000 m (except for the Thiel Mountains) that do not extend to sea level. The highest MAGT, of −17.0C, was modelled at the foot of the Shackleton Range and at the Pensacola Mountains. The MAGTs decreased down to −29C in the high mountains. The lowest MAGT of −29.8C was modelled in the Thiel Mountains.

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Figure 7Permafrost temperature map of the Transantarctic Mountains west of the 90 meridian. See Fig. 1 for location.

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Figure 8Permafrost temperature maps of the Transantarctic Mountains east of the 90 meridian and differences between borehole and modelled MAGT. Legends, scale and north arrow are valid for all panels. See Fig. 1 for location of panels (a), (b) and (c).

The region east of 90 E (Fig. 8) consists of numerous mountain ranges extending from the Ross Ice Shelf and Ross Sea up to more than 4000 m elevation and from 69 to 85 S latitude. The results show the widest range of MAGTs among all the regions, with the lowest temperature of −33.5C at Mount Markham in the Queen Elizabeth Range and the warmest at −8.5C on the Oates Coast. The modelled MAGTs close to the Ross Ice Shelf decreased northwards, from −15C at the Amundsen Coast to −18C to the north of the Dufek Coast. Similar MAGTs, between −19 and −17C, were modelled further north along the ice shelf at the Shackleton and Hillary coasts. Similar decreases in MAGT at higher elevations in the northward direction were observed, but local MAGT variations in relation to altitude were considerable. However, MAGTs below −30C were modelled at the highest parts of the mountain ranges along the Ross Ice Shelf. Higher MAGTs were modelled along the Ross Sea and range between −15 and −12C along the Scott and Borchgrevink coasts. The modelled MAGTs were around −10C at Cape Adare and between −13 and −10C on the Pennell Coast. MAGT was modelled down to −26C in the Prince Albert Mountains at elevations above 2000 m a.s.l. They approach −30C at the highest elevations, which exceed 3000 m a.s.l., in the Deep Freeze Range. Despite the elevations reaching 4000 m a.s.l in the Admiralty Mountains, the MAGT was only down to −23C.

McMurdo Dry Valleys

The McMurdo Dry Valleys are a part of the Transantarctic Mountains, include a large ice-free area (4500 km2) and are one of the most extensively studied permafrost regions in Antarctica (Levy, 2013; Bockheim et al., 2007). The lowest MAGT among the dry valleys is modelled in the Victoria Valley, falling below −24C at the lowest part (Fig. 9). A winter ground temperature inversion is pronounced with MAGTs in the surrounding valleys, modelled at around −21C. The MAGT also increases up the valleys to −21C in the McKelvey, Balham and Barwick Valleys. No MAGT inversion was modelled in the Wright Valley, where MAGTs ranged between −21 and −19C and in the Taylor Valley, which is the warmest, with an MAGT of −17C in the lower-lying parts and −20C in the upper part of the valley. At the Olympus and Asgard ranges and the Kukri Hills, which surround the valleys, MAGTs between −23 and −20C were modelled. In the surrounding mountains, close to the ice sheet, modelled MAGTs were around −25C and reached −27C at the highest and the most east-lying mountains. MAGTs along the coast of McMurdo Sound ranged from −13 to −17C. On Ross Island, the MAGT was modelled as −16C at the Scott and McMurdo bases, which are near sea level, and down to −24C at higher altitudes on Mount Erebus.

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Figure 9Permafrost temperature map of the McMurdo Dry Valleys and differences between borehole and modelled MAGT. See Fig. 1 for location. Note: the MAGT colour ramp is different from other figures. 1: McKelvey Valley. 2: Balham Valley. 3: Barwick Valley. 4: Olympus Range. 5: Asgard Range. 6: Kukri Hills.

3.7 Ellsworth Mountains

The ice-free area of the Ellsworth Mountains occupies 380 km2 of high-elevation terrain, with a modelled mean MAGT of −21.5C. The highest temperature was modelled at the foot of the mountains (−17.4C) at 500 m a.s.l., with −21C at 1000 m a.s.l., −22C at 2000 m and −26.1C at the highest elevations of Vinson Massif (Fig. 10).

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Figure 10Permafrost temperature map of the Ellsworth Mountains and differences between borehole and modelled MAGT. See Fig. 1 for location.

3.8 Marie Byrd Land

The ice-free areas in Marie Byrd Land occupy only 210 km2 and consist mostly of rock outcrops at lower elevations close to the coast and volcanos protruding through the ice sheet. In the Ford Ranges, MAGT was modelled as from −10C close to sea level to −16C at elevations exceeding 1000 m a.s.l (Fig. 11). MAGTs between −11 and −8C were modelled at the Hobbs, Walgreen, Eights and Ruppert coasts, reaching −6C on the islands surrounded by open sea. The volcano mountain ranges reaching 3000 m a.s.l. (Flood and Kohler Range) had MAGTs typically ranging between −16 to −14C at their peaks. Modelled MAGTs were between −25 and −21C on the Executive Committee Range, where rock outcrops occur above 2000 m a.s.l. and the highest peaks extend to over 4000 m a.s.l.

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Figure 11Permafrost temperature maps of Marie Byrd Land and differences between borehole and modelled MAGT. Legends, scale and north arrow are valid for both panels. See Fig. 1 for location of panels (a) and (b).

3.9 Antarctic Peninsula

The ice-free areas of the Antarctic Peninsula cover 3800 km2, including the South Shetland Islands, where the modelled MAGT was slightly below 0 C, and the mountains of the south-eastern Antarctic Peninsula, with modelled MAGTs of around −19C. The modelled near-surface permafrost temperatures in the Antarctic Peninsula were the warmest among all Antarctic regions, with an average modelled MAGT of −7.3C (Fig. 12).

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Figure 12Permafrost temperature maps of the Antarctic Peninsula and differences between borehole and modelled MAGT. Legends, scale and north arrow are valid for both panels. See Fig. 1 for location of panels (a) and (b).

3.9.1 Palmer Land

The mountains of Palmer Land show considerable differences between the eastern and western parts of the peninsula. Modelled MAGTs at the mountains of the Orville Coast were around −17C, increasing to about −12 to −15C at the Black Coast and eventually rising above −10C at the Wilkins Coast. On the western side at the Fallières Coast, MAGTs of up to −4C were modelled. Temperatures decreased to −6 to −8C at the Rymill Coast, around −10C at 1000 m a.s.l. and approaching −12C at 1500 m a.s.l. Similar MAGT ranges were modelled on Alexander Island, where MAGTs close to the coast were around −5C, decreasing to between −9 and −7C at 1000 m a.s.l. and falling below −10C at elevations above 2000 m a.s.l.

3.9.2 Graham Land

A considerable increase in modelled MAGT from the east to the west of Graham Land was observed, where the southern part of the eastern coast is protected by the Larsen Ice Shelf. Ground temperatures gradually increased in the northward direction on both sides of the peninsula. MAGTs at the Bowman and Foyn coasts ranged between −8 and −6C and slowly increased from −6C at the Oscar II Coast to around −4C at the northernmost part of the mainland, although still falling below −8C at higher elevations. On the western side, MAGT gradually decreased from around −2C on the northern Davis Coast to −5C at the south of the Danco Coast and Anvers Island, where MAGT also fell below −6C at higher elevations. Similar MAGT ranges were observed at the Graham and Loubet coasts and at Adelaide Island but were lower than −7C at higher elevations. Small Island along the western coast of the Antarctic Peninsula had a modelled MAGT between −3 and −1C.

3.9.3 South Shetland Islands and James Ross Island

Another frequently studied area in the Antarctic is the northern Antarctic Peninsula, especially the South Shetland Islands. At sites close to sea level, the modelled MAGT was usually above −1C on the South Shetland Islands (Fig. 13). MAGT decreased below −2C on sites that are not adjacent to the coast but still low-lying, such as Byers and Hurd Peninsulas on Livingston Island and Fildes Peninsula on King George Island. The MAGT was below −4C on the highest unglaciated peaks of Livingston and Smith Islands and reached −3C on Deception Island.

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Figure 13Permafrost temperature map of the northern Antarctic Peninsula and differences between borehole and modelled MAGT. See Fig. 1 for location. Note: the MAGT colour ramp is different from other figures. 1: Hurd Peninsula. 2: Fildes Peninsula.

Modelled MAGTs were noticeably colder on James Ross Island than on the South Shetland Islands, and, at sites adjacent to the sea, ranged from −3C in the north down to −5C in the south. Lower-lying ice-free areas, including Seymour Island, had MAGTs typically between −6 and −5C. The MAGTs on the highest rock outcrops were modelled as being down to −7C.

3.10 Other Antarctic and sub-Antarctic islands

The modelling results were derived for the Antarctic islands and sub-Antarctic islands, where the size and ice-free area of the island is sufficient that MODIS LST data were available. The MAGT on Signy Island ranged from −1.5C at the coast to −4C in the interior. Permafrost was modelled on all South Sandwich Islands, with similar MAGT ranges to those on Signy Island (Fig. 14). Less permafrost is modelled on South Georgia Island, where MAGTs at the coast increase to +1C and sporadic permafrost starts to occur at elevations above 100 m. The MAGTs decreased below −2C at the highest-lying rock outcrops. No permafrost was modelled on the Crozet Islands. MAGTs below 0 C were modelled at the highest elevations of Kerguelen Island and in isolated permafrost patches occurring above 500 m a.s.l. Permafrost is present also on the southernmost ice-free area of Heard Island.

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Figure 14Permafrost temperature maps of Antarctic islands and difference between borehole and modelled MAGT. Legends are valid for all panels. See Fig. 1 for location of panels (a), (b), (c), (d) and (e). Note: the MAGT colour ramp is different from other figures.

3.11 Regional MAGT distribution

The MAGT distribution of Antarctic is bimodal, with the most pronounced peak at −21C and the second peak at −7C (Fig. 15). The peaks correspond to the two largest ice-free areas of the Transantarctic Mountains and the Antarctic Peninsula; however the temperatures around the −20C peak also occur in other regions, such as Queen Maud Land, the Vestfold Hills and the Ellsworth Mountains. The most commonly modelled temperatures were between −23 and −18C and usually occurred in the mountains rising above the Antarctic Ice Sheet and glaciers. MAGTs between −10 and −6C occurred in the coastal areas of Wilkes Land, Marie Byrd Land, Queen Maud Land, Enderby Land and the Vestfold Hills. However the peak of temperature distribution at coastal sites shifted towards −7C because of MAGTs on the Antarctic Peninsula. The peak of coastal areas would be at −9C if the Antarctic Peninsula were excluded.

https://www.the-cryosphere.net/14/497/2020/tc-14-497-2020-f15

Figure 15Histogram of temperature distribution across the Antarctic for 1 C bins. Note: the ice-free areas were often smaller than the analysed pixel size.

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3.12 Altitudinal MAGT gradients

Average MAGT lapse rate for the whole Antarctic was 0.40 C (100 m)−1, ranging from 0.15 C (100 m)−1 in the Ellsworth Mountains to 0.59 C (100 m)−1 in Enderby Land. The lapse rates increased from 0.21 C (100 m)−1 in Wilkes Land to 0.38 C (100 m)−1 in the Transantarctic Mountains, 0.44 C (100 m)−1 in the Vestfold Hills, 0.47 C (100 m)−1 in Marie Byrd Land and in the Antarctic Peninsula, and 0.49 C (100 m)−1 in Queen Maud Land.

https://www.the-cryosphere.net/14/497/2020/tc-14-497-2020-f16

Figure 16Altitudinal MAGT gradients for Antarctic soil regions calculated for 100 m elevation bins.

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The lapse rates indicate significant regional differences in the modelled MAGT patterns in relation to elevation (Fig. 16). The warmest among all regions was the Antarctic Peninsula, which had MAGTs similar to Marie Byrd Land of −12C only at around 1300 m a.s.l. Marie Byrd Land, Queen Maud Land, Enderby Land and Wilkes Land had MAGTs of −9C at the coast but show varying characteristics of temperature decrease with elevation. Marie Byrd Land was the warmest, with a decrease in MAGT up to 1500 m a.s.l. and a faster decrease to −25C at 3000 m a.s.l. The slower decrease in temperature with altitude to the 1500 m elevation was also modelled in Enderby Land, but the MAGT was colder. The MAGT decreased rapidly to −13C at 700 m a.s.l. in Queen Maud Land, where it slightly increased with elevation and then dropped steadily to −22C at 2800 m a.s.l. The MAGT increase with elevation could be explained by presence of rock outcrops with similar elevation in different latitudes or in different settings regarding continentality.

The modelled MAGT in the Vestfold Hills dropped rapidly, from −10C at the coast to −17C at 200 m a.s.l., and then gradually decreased to −24C at 2000 m a.s.l. There are no rock outcrops close to sea level in the Ellsworth Mountains, and the MAGT at 100 m a.s.l. was −20C. In the Ellsworth Mountains there was a slow decrease in the modelled MAGT, to −25C at 3000 m a.s.l. The coldest MAGTs (below −30C) were modelled in the Transantarctic Mountains. In the part west of the 90 meridian, the MAGT dropped from −20C at 500 m a.s.l to −27C at 2000 m a.s.l., but the absolute temperatures were lower east of the 90 meridian, where elevations exceed 4000 m a.s.l.

According to the gradients for subregions of the northern Antarctic Peninsula, the warmest were the South Shetland Islands, followed by Palmer Archipelago (Fig. 17). The altitudinal MAGT profiles showed clear differences between the western and eastern parts of the northern Antarctic Peninsula mainland, although James Ross Island had a similar altitudinal profile to the western Antarctic Peninsula mainland. A significant decrease in MAGT from sea level to 100 m elevation was observed on the South Shetland Islands, Palmer Archipelago and on the western Antarctic Peninsula mainland.

https://www.the-cryosphere.net/14/497/2020/tc-14-497-2020-f17

Figure 17Altitudinal MAGT gradients for the northern Antarctic Peninsula calculated for 100 m elevation bins.

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4 Discussion

4.1 Comparison to borehole measurements

4.1.1 Queen Maud Land

The modelled MAGT was, according to validation data, overestimated in Queen Maud Land (Fig. 3). Overestimation in Schirmacher Hills and Troll Station was below 1 C but was higher than 4 C in Flårjuven Bluff and Vesleskarvet. Both stations are located on nunataks, which are exposed to wind that blows the snow away. The estimated 120 mm of annual snowfall resulted in nf factors that were too low for snow-free conditions. However, the minimum MAGT of the ensemble spread approaches the measured MAGT at both stations (Appendix A).

4.1.2 Enderby Land, Vestfold Hills and Wilkes Land

The borehole data in Enderby Land were from the Molodejnaya station (Thala Hills), where modelled MAGT was overestimated by 1.6 C (Fig. 4). The overestimation can be explained by rather thin snow cover due to strong winds and snow redistribution at the borehole site, which is confirmed by small differences between measured winter air and ground surface temperatures. The MAGT was accurately modelled in the coastal parts of the Vestfold Hills region, where validation data were available (Fig. 5). The difference between modelled and measured MAGT was small at the Larsemann Hills borehole, but slight MAGT overestimation (between 0.6 and 0.9 C) was observed in comparison to the Larsemann and Landing Nunatak borehole measurements. Similarly, the MAGT was accurately modelled at the Bunger Hills station in the Wilkes Land region, with only small differences in comparison to measured ground temperature (Fig. 6).

4.1.3 Transantarctic Mountains

The majority of the available validation data in the Transantarctic Mountains region were in the vicinity of the McMurdo Dry Valleys (Fig. 9). The sites on the floors of the McMurdo Dry Valleys (Victoria Valley, Wright Valley floor and Bull Pass) were modelled well, with slight overestimation in Victoria Valley and underestimation of around 1 C in the Wright Valley. Two observation sites on small terraces on the walls of the Wright Valley (WV south wall and WV north wall) were modelled 3–4 C too cold. The difference can be explained by the micro-location of both sites, which are sheltered from katabatic winds, are above the winter inversion layer and receive abundant summer solar radiation. The MAGT was overestimated by up to 1 C at Mount Fleming, Scott Base and the Marble Point borehole, which lie outside the valleys. The MAGT at the Marble Point site, characterised by glacial till, was overestimated by 2.2 C; however, the Marble Point borehole, which was drilled in granite bedrock approximately 1 km away, showed smaller overestimation. The MAGT was underestimated by more than 4C at the Granite Harbour site, which has a warm microclimate, as it is situated on a north-facing moraine that receives a lot of meltwater from upslope.

Outside the McMurdo Dry Valleys, MAGT measurements from the Zucchelli Station and Baker Rocks were available (Fig. 9). The MAGT was overestimated by 2.3 C at the Boulder clay borehole, which was drilled in a glacial till, exposed to katabatic winds and characterised by numerous snow drifts (Guglielmin, 2006), causing high local variability in permafrost conditions. On the other hand, the MAGT was overestimated by only 0.2 C at the Oasi New borehole, which is located in a granitic outcrop. MAGT at the Baker Rocks site, which is situated in littoral deposits (Raffi and Stenni, 2011), was underestimated by 0.9 C.

4.1.4 Marie Byrd Land

The only available borehole data in Marie Byrd Land (Fig. 11) were from the Russian research station Russkaya. According to the measured MAGT between 2008–2013 the modelled MAGT was overestimated by 3.4 C. The area is characterised by frequent storms and strong winds, which blow off most of the snow on one hand and decrease the number and quality of the MODIS measurements on the other hand. The snow-free conditions at the Hobbs Coast borehole site were likely not simulated by the snow model, which resulted in the MAGT overestimation. An alternative explanation could be the measurement period, which was only 5 years in comparison to 17 modelled years. No validation data were available for the higher elevations of the volcanic ranges. The modelled MAGTs there might be underestimated because the TTOP model does not account for the ground heat flux. This can especially be the case in the locations with recent volcanic activity.

4.1.5 Antarctic Peninsula

Comparison of the modelled MAGT with measured MAGT in boreholes showed an underestimation on the western Antarctic Peninsula and slight overestimation on the eastern Antarctic Peninsula (Fig. 13). The MAGTs are underestimated by between 1 and 2.1 C on the South Shetland Islands (King George, Livingston and Deception Island). The underestimations may be explained by heat advection from meltwater and rain that is not simulated by the model but is especially common in this part of the Antarctic. Another possible explanation for deviations of the modelled MAGT on the north-eastern Antarctic Peninsula are the frequent cloudy conditions. Although clouds are generally masked out by the MODIS LST and replaced by ERA reanalysis temperatures, measurements in some areas are still contaminated with cloud temperatures, which results in MAGT underestimation (Østby et al., 2014).

Recent shallowing of thaw depth and ground cooling were observed on Deception Island by Ramos et al. (2017). However, similar cooling was recorded also on the eastern Antarctic Peninsula, but MAGT was overestimated by 1.4 C at Marambio Island and by 0.8 C at Abernethy Flats and by 0.6 C at the Johann Gregor Mendel borehole sites. MAGT was overestimated by only 0.2 C at the Hope Bay mainland site, which suggests that there was a continuous gradient of MAGT overestimation from the eastern Antarctic Peninsula to MAGT underestimation on the western Antarctic Peninsula.

4.2 Permafrost controls

The modelled permafrost temperatures reflect the climatic characteristics of the Antarctic, with major controls of latitude, elevation and continentality (Vieira et al., 2010). The effects of the ocean and continentality are well reflected in altitudinal MAGT profiles in Figs. 16 and 17. Regions with areas close to the open sea generally show faster MAGT decrease with elevation, which was observed especially in the Vestfold Hills, the Transantarctic Mountains east of the 90 meridian and in Marie Byrd Land, where the MAGT dropped significantly with the first elevation increase of 100 or 200 m. The same phenomenon was observed on the North Antarctic Peninsula, on the South Shetland Islands, in the Palmer Archipelago and on the western Antarctic Peninsula mainland, where there is less sea ice than on James Ross Island, and the western Antarctic Peninsula mainland, where a MAGT decrease was not observed. The continental mountainous regions of the Ellsworth Mountains, and the Transantarctic Mountains west of the 90 meridian, have no open sea in the vicinity and had a significantly slower MAGT drop with the altitude.

The modelled MAGT lapse rate of 0.40 C (100 m)−1 for the whole Antarctic is lower than the average air temperature lapse rate of 0.65 C (100 m)−1 in the International Standard Atmosphere (ISO 2533:1975) but is, however, the same as the mean air temperature lapse rate measured for ice-free sites on James Ross Island from 2013–2016 (Ambrozova et al., 2019). Small increases in MAGTs with elevation were observed in many regions. This might be attributed to the nature of the analysis rather than a presence of temperature inversions. The rock outcrops on the scale of the regions are often present at different elevations far from each other, which results in occurrence of higher MAGTs at higher elevations. Additionally, some elevation bins have only a few rock outcrop pixels, which makes the averaged MAGT less representative for the whole region.

The lowest MAGT ensemble mean of −33.5C was modelled in the Transantarctic Mountains at the Queen Elizabeth Range, where the highest peak reaches 4350 m. The MAGT there could fall below −36C according to the coldest ensemble member. This is the lowest MAGT modelled on Earth according to the modelling in the other parts of the globe (Obu et al., 2019a, b). On the highest Antarctic peak, Mount Vinson in the Ellsworth Mountains, reaching 4892 m, a MAGT of only −26.1C was modelled. The Queen Elizabeth Range lies approximately 5 further south than Mount Vinson, illustrating the effect of latitude on permafrost temperatures.

The winter air temperature inversions that occur in the McMurdo Dry Valleys result in air temperatures that are about 10 C lower in the valleys than in the surroundings, but inversions are occasionally disrupted by winter storms. The winter inversions reflect MAGTs being approximately 3 C colder on the floor than the in surrounding areas in Victoria Valley, where the inversions are particularly intense in comparison to other valleys. No MAGT inversions were modelled in the Wright Valley, at only 50 m a.s.l (though winter temperature inversions do occur there), or in the Taylor Valley, which is opened to the coast and can drain cold air.

4.3 Model performance and limitations

As the LST data are primarily derived from satellite data, their availability and accuracy depend on cloud cover. On one hand the frequent cloud cover might be a reason for general underestimation of modelled MAGT at Antarctic Peninsula. However, the clear-sky conditions in the McMurdo Dry Valleys might explain the relatively successful modelling results in this area.

The absence of vegetation in the Antarctic results in high snow redistribution by wind and highly spatially variable snow cover, which influences ground temperatures in many parts of the Antarctic (Guglielmin et al., 2014; Ramos et al., 2017; Ferreira et al., 2017). Neither snow redistribution nor sublimation are simulated by our snowfall model, and the average snow depths could not be estimated, so nf factors could not be derived for the Antarctic in the same manner as was done for the Northern Hemisphere by Obu et al. (2019a). Although an ensemble of 200 model runs with varying annual snowfall is used, the mean of the ensemble runs does not always represent the borehole site microclimate and ground properties. In the case of wind-exposed nunataks where the snow presence is overestimated on larger areas, such as Flårjuven Bluff and Vesleskarvet, the MAGTs were overestimated by up to 4 C, but the modelled ensemble minimum still approached the measured MAGT.

Several permafrost and active-layer studies in the Antarctic have noted occurrence of nf factors above 1 (Lacelle et al., 2016; Kotzé and Meiklejohn, 2017), which indicates that average air temperatures are higher than ground surface temperatures. The likely explanation could be a presence of snow during the warmer part of the year, which is insulating ground from heat, unlike from cold in the winter. However Kotzé and Meiklejohn (2017) mention also a presence of blocky deposits at the Vesleskarvet site, which could result in ground cooling due to cold air advection. The concept of nf factors was introduced for the Northern Hemisphere to account for the effect of snow cover during freezing conditions (Smith and Riseborough, 1996), which challenges the derivation of nf factors for TTOP modelling on the Antarctic sites with highly temporarily variable snow cover.

Ground properties such as water or organic matter contents could not be taken into account by rk factors due to the absence of datasets on a pan-Antarctic scale. However, the rk factors are multiplied only with TDDs in the TTOP model. The TDDs are low in comparison to FDDs in the Antarctic, which results in limited influence of the rk factors on the results. There were no TDDs present in the Antarctic interior according to the input data. TDDs in coastal areas usually contributed less than 1 % to the whole sum of FDDs and TDDs, and this contribution increased up to 15 % at the lowland sites on the South Shetland Islands. However, ground stratigraphies are crucial for transient permafrost models in the Antarctic.

Elevation is one of the major permafrost controlling factors in the Antarctic (Vieira et al., 2010). In steep terrain, the model input datasets are less likely to be representative for the micro-locations within the modelled pixel or the borehole site, as, for example, shown on the borehole sites on the walls of the Wright Valley. A number of the Antarctic boreholes are situated in mountainous environments, which might explain some of the discrepancies between measured and modelled MAGT. Elevation uncertainties in digital elevation model are inherited by the model and reflected in the estimated average annual snowfall and downscaled ERA reanalysis temperatures. The elevations of some peaks might also not be well represented at the spatial resolution of 1 km; therefore the modelled MAGT might appear warmer than the MAGT found on the top a peak.

5 Conclusions

Near-surface permafrost temperatures in the Antarctic were most commonly modelled as being between −23 and −18C for mountainous areas rising above the Antarctic Ice Sheet. The Earth's lowest permafrost temperature of −36C was modelled at Mount Markham in the Queen Elizabeth Range in the Transantarctic Mountains. Coastal regions were usually characterised with ground temperatures between −14 and −8C, approaching 0 C in the coastal areas of the Antarctic Peninsula and rising above 0 C in the Antarctic islands. The regional variations in permafrost temperatures can be explained by (1) continentality, which influences permafrost temperatures, especially at elevations of up to 200 m, (2) elevation and (3) latitude, which explains differences in permafrost temperatures at similar elevations. Snow cover and snow redistribution have strong influence on local permafrost temperature variations in the Antarctic.

Comparison of modelled temperatures to 40 permafrost boreholes and soil-climate stations yielded root-mean-square error of 1.9 C, but the accuracy varied significantly between borehole sites. The difference was smaller than 1 C for more than 50 % of the sites but can exceed 4 C. The greatest differences between the modelled and measured permafrost temperatures occurred where snow conditions were not successfully represented in the model. These sites are generally exposed to a strong wind-driven redistribution of snow, as, for example, at nunataks in Queen Maud Land, on the Hobs Coast and in Marie Byrd Land. Considerable differences between modelled and measured MAGTs also occurred at sites with microclimate and ground properties that are not representative for the respective modelled 1 km2 pixel. Permafrost temperatures on the walls of Wright Valley and in Granite Harbour were underestimated by up to 4 C, which can be explained by warm microclimates of the borehole sites compared to surroundings. The model performed well in areas with frequent cloud-free conditions, such as the McMurdo Dry Valleys, where even winter air temperature inversions are reflected in the modelled permafrost temperatures. Frequent cloudy conditions on the north-western Antarctic Peninsula can to some extent explain the systematic underestimation of modelled permafrost temperatures in this area.

This study is the first continent-wide modelling of permafrost temperatures for the Antarctic. It reports near-surface permafrost temperatures for remote regions without observations, which is highly valuable for research fields, such as climate change, terrestrial ecology, microbiology or astrobiology. Our study suggests that extended networks of currently sparse borehole temperature measurements and spatially distributed information on snow cover and ground properties are crucial for improving future permafrost modelling results in the Antarctic.

Appendix A

Table A1List of borehole properties, measurements and modelled results. NA: not available.

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Data availability

The data are available for download at https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.902576 (Obu et al., 2019c).

Author contributions

JO, SW, GV, AB and AK designed the conceptual framework for the study, and the model was developed and run by SW and JO. Ground validation data were contributed by GV, AA, MB, FH and MR, who also provided interpretation of results on a regional scale. JO wrote the paper, based on input and feedback from all co-authors.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.

Acknowledgements

This work was funded by the European Space Agency Data User Element GlobPermafrost project in cooperation with ZAMG (grant number 4000116196/15/I-NB) and the Research Council of Norway SatPerm project (grant number 239918). Data storage resources were provided by Norwegian National Infrastructure for Research Data (project NS9079K). The work of Filip Hrbáček was supported by the Ministry of Education Youth and Sports of Czech Republic large infrastructure project LM2015078. Temperature data for Russian stations were obtained with the support from the Russian Antarctic Expedition and government programme AAAA-A18-118013190181-6. The PERMANTAR observatories on the western Antarctic Peninsula have been funded mainly by the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology and the Portuguese Polar Program. The Terra and AQUA MODIS LST datasets were acquired from the Level-1 and Atmosphere Archive and Distribution System (LAADS) Distributed Active Archive Center (DAAC), located in the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland (https://ladsweb.nascom.nasa.gov/; last access: 23 May 2019). Over the years many people have contributed to installation and maintenance of the McMurdo Dry Valley Soil Climate stations, but special thanks are due to Cathy Seybold, Ron Paetzold and Don Huffman from the USDA; Jackie Aislabie and Fraser Morgan from Landcare Research, New Zealand; and Chris Morcom, Dean Sandwell and Annette Carshalton from the University of Waikato, New Zealand. Antarctica New Zealand provided logistic support for annual station access. The authors also thank Nikita Demidov, Andrey Dolgikh, Elya Zazovskaya, Nikolay Osokin, Dima Fedorov-Davidov, Andrey Ivashchenko, Alexey Lupachev and Nikita Mergelov for borehole data retrieval from the Russian Antarctic stations.

Financial support

This research has been supported by the European Space Agency (grant no. 4000116196/15/I-NB), the Research Council of Norway (grant no. 239918), the Norwegian National Infrastructure for Research Data (grant no. NS9079K), the Ministry of Education Youth and Sports of Czech Republic (grant no. LM2015078), and the Russian Antarctic Expedition and Government programme (grant no. AAAA-A18-118013190181-6).

Review statement

This paper was edited by Christian Beer and reviewed by Joseph Levy and one anonymous referee.

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Short summary
Little is known about permafrost in the Antarctic outside of the few research stations. We used a simple equilibrium permafrost model to estimate permafrost temperatures in the whole Antarctic. The lowest permafrost temperature on Earth is −36 °C in the Queen Elizabeth Range in the Transantarctic Mountains. Temperatures are commonly between −23 and −18 °C in mountainous areas rising above the Antarctic Ice Sheet, between −14 and −8 °C in coastal areas, and up to 0 °C on the Antarctic Peninsula.