EPISODE · Jul 15, 2026 · 11 MIN
When Rising Seas Thaw Frozen Ground from Below
from Waterlines: How Water Shapes Our World · host jaywen
Takeaway: Rising seas can thaw Arctic permafrost from the side because salty groundwater stays liquid at temperatures where fresh groundwater would freeze.Arctic coasts are changing in ways people can see: cliffs crumble, waves reach farther inland, and roads and buildings sit on less certain ground. This episode looks at a harder-to-see change happening underground, where rising seas can push salty water into coastal permafrost and help thaw it from the side, not just from the warming air above. We unpack how salt lowers water’s freezing point, why that matters for frozen soil, and what this could mean for Arctic communities, coastal infrastructure, groundwater, and carbon stored in once-frozen ground.The paper follows a modeling study, not a single field site, so we talk about both its power and its limits: it brings together groundwater flow, heat, salt movement, freezing and thawing, and salt left behind as ice forms. The result is a clearer picture of a hidden coastal feedback: sea-level rise does not only flood the surface; it can change the freezing rules underground.Citation: Guimond, J. A., Mohammed, A. A., Walvoord, M. A., Bense, V. F., & Kurylyk, B. L. (2021). Saltwater intrusion intensifies coastal permafrost thaw. Geophysical Research Letters, 48, e2021GL094776. https://doi.org/10.1029/2021GL094776Disclosure: This Waterlines episode package is written for production with AI-generated voices.
What this episode covers
Takeaway: Rising seas can thaw Arctic permafrost from the side because salty groundwater stays liquid at temperatures where fresh groundwater would freeze.Arctic coasts are changing in ways people can see: cliffs crumble, waves reach farther inland, and roads and buildings sit on less certain ground. This episode looks at a harder-to-see change happening underground, where rising seas can push salty water into coastal permafrost and help thaw it from the side, not just from the warming air above. We unpack how salt lowers water’s freezing point, why that matters for frozen soil, and what this could mean for Arctic communities, coastal infrastructure, groundwater, and carbon stored in once-frozen ground.The paper follows a modeling study, not a single field site, so we talk about both its power and its limits: it brings together groundwater flow, heat, salt movement, freezing and thawing, and salt left behind as ice forms. The result is a clearer picture of a hidden coastal feedback: sea-level rise does not only flood the surface; it can change the freezing rules underground.Citation: Guimond, J. A., Mohammed, A. A., Walvoord, M. A., Bense, V. F., & Kurylyk, B. L. (2021). Saltwater intrusion intensifies coastal permafrost thaw. Geophysical Research Letters, 48, e2021GL094776. https://doi.org/10.1029/2021GL094776Disclosure: This Waterlines episode package is written for production with AI-generated voices.
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When Rising Seas Thaw Frozen Ground from Below
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