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All the United States Alaska Fairbanks Permafrost Tunnel

Permafrost Tunnel

This frozen tunnel in central Alaska is both an engineering feat and a valuable climate classroom.

Fairbanks, Alaska

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skyecooley
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The Tunnel   U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
The tunnel is primarily a research facility   U.S. Depart of the Interior
From the entrance   Fort Wainwright Public Affairs Office
Looking back towards the entrance   Fort Wainwright Public Affairs Office
Tunnel entrance from outside   Fort Wainwright Public Affairs Office
It’s comprised of an adit and a winze   Fort Wainwright Public Affairs Office
Ice is not necessary to define permafrost, but this area has ice too   Public Affairs Office Fort Wainwright
  Bluejeanlace / Atlas Obscura User
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Almost a quarter of the land of the Northern Hemisphere is permafrost, and about a third of that is in the western half of North America. This includes an area near Fairbanks, Alaska, where the Army Corps of Engineers has a permafrost tunnel as part of the Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory, or “CRREL.”

The CRREL tunnel is roomy, about 360 feet long, six to eight feet high and about 15 feet wide. It’s rich with frozen animal and plant remains, fossils of all kinds, and layers of frozen silt, sand, gravel and bedrock. The space is comprised of an “adit” (just a more impressive word for access portal) and a “winze” (a term used in mining to describe sections that adjusts for differing levels or depths), and given its Army Corps parentage, it’s a feat of engineering.

The tunnel started out in the early 1960s as a kind of training camp, for the Corps to learn more about excavating permafrost. In the later 1960s, it was used for similar purposes by the Bureau of Mines to test permafrost mining techniques. Ultimately though, the tunnel has proven its value as a science lab, turning the exposed walls into a frozen classroom on how permafrost behaves, how fossils and sediment have piled up over the epochs, and how the layers may be altered by climate change.

Permafrost is simply a frozen state of ground, not necessarily icy (although it can include ice in its makeup). It’s defined by temperature, not water content, so if the ground—be it soil, rock, peat, sand or river sediment—maintains a temperature of zero degrees Celsius or lower, you’ve got permafrost.  

The exposure caused by tunneling has created a paradoxical engineering dilemma for the Corps: how to keep it frozen when outside air is circulating throughout. CRREL has figured that out too. In the winter there is a system of funneling the outside air back in. In the summer, they’ve got some very fancy A/C.

Related Tags

Tunnels Ice Caves Ice Military Science Engineering Subterranean Sites

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skyecooley

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stradamvarius, susandry, Bluejeanlace

  • stradamvarius
  • susandry
  • Bluejeanlace

Published

November 17, 2016

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  • http://permafrosttunnel.crrel.usace.army.mil/
  • https://www.wunderground.com/climate/permafrost.asp?MR=1
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permafrost
Permafrost Tunnel
Fairbanks, Alaska
United States
64.951093, -147.624454
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