Oct. 22, 2021
Killam Laureate searches for permafrost in the Canadian Rockies
You may wonder, as we all do now and then, what avalanches have in common with marmots. If so, you may wish to speak to a specialist in alpine hydrology like Gerardo Zegers.
A PhD candidate in geoscience, Zegers has been named a 2021 Killam Laureate for his research on transformations in the permafrost of the Canadian Rockies. Through mountain fieldwork and numerical modelling, Zegers seeks to understand both how to identify locations of alpine permafrost, and what the long-term fate of that permafrost will be as climate change proceeds.
Understanding alpine permafrost
In the mountains, permafrost can be buried below sediment deposits and other landforms. 鈥淲hen we think of permafrost, we often think of the North,鈥 explains Zegers. 鈥淏y comparison, in mountain environments, permafrost occurrence is greatly affected by the complex mountain topography and ground types and is exposed to significant spatial heterogeneity. Some landforms like talus slopes, rock glaciers and moraines have better conditions for generating and sustaining permafrost. Considering the effect of this heterogeneity just within a 100-metre area, you can have zones with and without permafrost.鈥
This can make finding permafrost a challenge. Once Zegers identifies an area of high probability for permafrost, his research estimates current permafrost conditions along with what effects the permafrost has on groundwater. 鈥淚n the alpine aquifers that contain permafrost, the permafrost influences the internal flows and the surface water - groundwater interaction. So, we are trying to understand the impact of the decrease in mountain permafrost on groundwater discharge.鈥
Of marmots and avalanches
鈥淲e have a period of around two months each year in which we can get out into the field and place i-buttons, which are surficial temperature sensors that are around the size and shape of a watch battery,鈥 says Zegers. 鈥淲e record and save the positions, marking them with bamboo sticks with flags on them. We leave them for a year, and then go out in the following field season to recover them.鈥
Zegers admits that it can be challenging to recover the sensors. 鈥淚n our first year, we placed 150 sensors and then lost around 10 per cent of them. Marmot theft accounts for some of the losses, while other sensors were buried in avalanches,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he window to do this backcountry field work is very short. Even in mid-July, we visited a site in Kananaskis that still had almost half a metre of snow in some places.鈥
Expanding on previous work, Zegers and his team placed around 260 sensors this year. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a lot of work, and we get support from a team that includes a full-time field technician, a field assistant, and other graduate students. This work would be impossible to do on my own.鈥
Opportunities at 草莓污视频导航
As a Chilean, Zegers already had a strong affinity for alpine environments and was a lover of hiking and camping before coming to Canada. When 草莓污视频导航鈥檚 Dr. Masaki Hayashi, PhD, presented his research in Chile during the , Zegers took the opportunity to introduce himself and discussed his previous graduate work and research at Chile鈥檚 Advanced Mining and Technology Centre. It wasn鈥檛 long before the meeting galvanized into a doctoral opportunity under Hayashi鈥檚 supervision.
鈥淚 wanted to do a PhD in Canada, and my partner and I wanted to find a place that worked for both of us. She鈥檚 now pursuing a Master of Science in Sustainable Energy Development, and we鈥檙e really happy to have found a place with a welcoming culture where we can both improve our English, be close to the mountains, and find career opportunities,鈥 says Zegers.
28 Killam Pre-Doctoral Laureates
Being named a Killam Laureate is a confirmation for Zegers that he is on the right track in his doctoral work. 鈥淭here are a lot of long days when working on a PhD, and with the COVID pandemic making things more challenging, sometimes you lose the perception that you are making progress,鈥 says Zegers. 鈥淭he Killam award validates that I鈥檓 pursuing a good topic, and that others find it important.鈥
Dr. Donna-Marie McCafferty, associate dean (scholarships) in the Faculty of Graduate Studies, is jubilant about Zegers and all the university鈥檚 2021 Killam Laureates. 鈥淲e have no less than 28 Killam Laureates this year, all doing fascinating research,鈥 says McCafferty.
鈥淭hese students are not only among the best and brightest at 草莓污视频导航 but are in the company of Canada鈥檚 elite emerging academics. I know that each of our laureates understands the magnitude of this honour, and we couldn鈥檛 be prouder of them.鈥
Izaak Walton Killam Memorial Scholarship
The Izaak Walton Killam Memorial Scholarship is awarded to international and Canadian doctoral students showing the potential to become leaders in their fields. The scholarship is valued at $36,000 annually for two years. While the scholarship provides crucial support for student research, it also brings prestige that can help propel students toward new professional and academic opportunities.