THE TUNDRA AND POLAR SEMI-DESERT LANDSCAPES OF BANKS ISLAND AND PRINCE PATRICK ISLAND, WESTERN CANADIAN ARCTIC

Tundra and polar desert environments characterize the islands of the Western Canadian Arctic. Prince Patrick Island is a typical polar semi-desert; Banks Island illustrates the intermixing of polar-desert and tundra environments. Interpretation of these periglacial landscapes must consider not only the normal links that exist between rocks, relief, climate and weathering but also specific relationships between low temperature, aridity, snow, frozen ground, wind and vegetation. Los paisajes de tundra y de semi-desierto polar de las islas Banks y Prince Patrick, Ártico Occidental Canadiense RESUMEN. Los ambientes de tundra y polar desértico caracterizan a las islas del Ártico Occidental canadiense. La Isla de Prince Patrick es un semi-desierto polar típico; la isla de Banks ilustra la mezcla de ambientes de desierto polar y de tundra. La interpretación de estos paisajes periglaciares debe considerar no solo las relaciones existentes entre rocas, relieve, clima y meteorización, sino también relaciones específicas entre baja temperatura, aridez, nieve, suelo helado, viento y vegetación.


Introduction
Periglacial environments are those in which cold, non-glacial processes dominate. Frost action and either seasonally or perennially-frozen ground (permafrost) are central characteristics (French, 2007). In the polar latitudes, periglacial environments range between polar desert, tundra, shrub tundra and boreal forest or taiga. In the montane environments of central Asia and Tibet, they range between steppe, steppe-tundra and semi-desert. The alpine environments of the mid-latitude mountains are a further type.
This paper describes the polar semi-desert and tundra environments that occur on two islands located between latitudes 72º and 77º N in the Western Canadian Arctic (Fig.  1). Banks Island, the fourth largest in the Canadian Arctic, covers an area of ~70,000 km 2 . Prince Patrick Island covers an area of ~17,000 km 2 . Banks Island is separated from the mainland of Canada by Amundsen Gulf while M'Clure Strait separates Prince Patrick Island from Banks Island. These water bodies are ice-covered for more than 8-9 months of the year.  Tozer and Thorsteinsson, 1962; Thorsteinsson and Tozer, 1964. The locations of Sachs Harbour and Mould Bay are indicated by arrows 1, 2, respectively. The approximate extent of Auklavik National Park on Banks Island is outlined by the dashed line.

Cold deserts
Many periglacial environments, especially those in the high latitudes, are cold deserts. For example, in the climatic classification of Koeppen-Geiger, cold deserts are classified as either Bwk (areas that experience annual average temperatures less than 18ºC) or Dwc (areas that experience dry winters, less than 4 months above 10ºC and the coldest month being lower than -3ºC). While cold deserts are defined primarily on the basis of temperature, moisture availability is also a central concern. This is the balance between water supply, provided by precipitation (P, rain or snow), and water loss due to evapotranspiration (PE t , both evaporation from water and transpiration from plants and near-surface sediment). Thus, cold deserts can also be defined as to whether they are arid, hyper-arid, semi-arid or dry subhumid (Table 1). The aridity of cold deserts introduces complexity to periglacial landscape interpretation. First, low temperature not only reduces evaporation but also enhances sublimation and hence the direct removal of moisture (snow) to the atmosphere. A further complication is that a sparse vegetation cover reduces evapotranspiration losses while the presence of a frozen, largely impermeable substrate (permafrost) reduces infiltration into the ground. Both enhance the overall effectiveness of precipitation and surface runoff. Furthermore, the presence of snow, unevenly distributed across the landscape because of transport by wind in winter and persisting for many months in summer in certain localities, introduces spatial and temporal complexities to many landscape-forming processes.
Sometimes, the tundra is not regarded as a cold desert because many of the associated lowlands are well vegetated and wildlife is present. Large rivers drain the northern areas of the Eurasia and North American continents but this impression of moisture is deceptive because the discharge of these rivers is largely derived from mountainous regions that lie outside the tundra region. The reality is that most tundra regions experience no more than ~200-500 mm of precipitation annually and, therefore, they fall within the semi-arid category (see Table 1A). A final consideration is that, at the higher northern latitudes, many tundra regions possess an intimate mix of poorlydrained but well-vegetated lowlands and well-drained but poorly-vegetated interfluves and uplands. This intermixing disguises the recognition of aridity.
The Banks Island tundra illustrates the difficulty of recognizing the tundra as a cold desert. Contrary to its climatic designation, the Banks Island tundra supports a highly productive ecosystem. This was the initial reason why mainland Inuit established a permanent settlement at Sachs Harbour in the late 1940s. While shallow interfluves and uplands are dominated by polar desert and semi-desert plant communities, broad river valleys and extensive lowlands support Arctic dwarf shrubs, grasses, sedges and flowering plants. These tundra meadows attract a diversity of flora and fauna. More than 15,000 muskoxen live in Auklavik National Park alone and total numbers on the island currently exceed 20-30,000, the highest density for this animal in the entire Canadian Arctic. Caribou, Arctic fox and wolf range widely, and numerous migratory birds such as geese are present during summer months. The larger lakes contain char and trout. Muskoxen meadows, the dens of foxes and the nesting or perching areas of predatory birds, such as owls and hawks, are often marked by tundra grasses and small mounds. Table 2 summarizes the annual temperature and precipitation regimes for Sachs Harbour, on the southwestern tip of Banks Island, and Mould Bay, on eastern Prince Patrick Island. The mean annual air temperatures are -14ºC and -18ºC respectively. Monthly average temperatures fall below -30ºC for several months during the winter and range between 1ºC and 5ºC during a short summer when the ground surface typically thaws to depths of between 0.5 and 1.0 m. Beneath this seasonally-thawed layer (the active layer) the ground remains perennially frozen (permafrost) to depths that may exceed several hundreds of meters. Table 2 indicates that the mean annual precipitation amounts for Sachs Harbour and Mould Bay total 114 and 81mm respectively. It is clear that both islands fall within the 'arid' category (see Table 1). Between 40-50% of the annual precipitation on the two islands falls as rain during the 2-3 summer months. However, because of low temperatures, evaporative losses are relatively small, rain quickly percolates into the seasonally-thawed layer, and snow sublimates. The majority of precipitation falls as snow during the rest of the year. Wind redistributes the snow into either gullies or leeslope positions. Thus, during the winter months, the interfluves and higher elevations are largely bare of snow. This uneven spatial distribution allows not only frost to quickly penetrate snow-free surfaces in winter but also concentrates snowmelt runoff from large snow banks in a brief 2-3 week period during the spring.  (1948-1970, 15.2 m a.s.l.) and Sachs Harbour (1955-1970. From Maxwell, 1980.

Glaciated terrain?
It is generally agreed that Prince Patrick Island is located beyond the western limits of the NW Laurentide and Innuitian ice sheets (England et al., 2006(England et al., , 2009. However, the presence of scattered erratics, meltwater channels and outwash fans suggest older, possibly local, ice caps on the central part of the island prior to the last cold period (Fyles, 1965).
The glacial history of Banks Island is more complicated. Based upon a widespread veneer of glacigenic and surficial materials, a complex sequence of Quaternary glaciations has been proposed (Vincent, 1982(Vincent, , 1983. The latest (Amundsen) advance of the Laurentide ice sheet reached the eastern part of the island and ice lobes extended westwards into Amundsen Gulf and M'Clure Strait. Under this scenario, the central lowlands remained ice-free during the Late Quaternary and only the extreme northwest (the Beaufort Plain) was unaffected by glaciation. A series of ice marginal drainage channels can be recognized (French, 1972a). More recent investigations (England et al., 2009;Lakeman and England, 2014) suggest that a thin and stationary (cold-based) ice sheet covered all of central and western Banks Island during the height of the last cold period. This is supported by the apparent absence of any faunal remains from central Banks Island that can be radiocarbon dated to the last major cold period (~ 40-20ka). If this area were ice-free at that time, it would have acted as a refugium for both plants and animals. Yet only a single muskoxen bone, taken from a gravel bar of the Bernard River and dated at >34ka (Maher, 1968), has been found from this time period.

Structure and relief
In most regions of the world, the major landscape control is related to geology. This is certainly true for both Banks Island and Prince Patrick Island.
Banks Island contains a number of different physiographic regions (see Fig. 1). The northeast plateau consists of Devonian age limestone and the southern uplands consist of Precambrian gabbro rocks. These rocks form upland terrain rising to elevations of ~700 m. By contrast, the majority of the central and western lowlands are underlain by poorly consolidated Mesozoic-age sediments that vary in lithology from shale of the Christopher Formation to sands and gravels of the Eureka Sound and Beaufort Formations (Thorsteinsson and Tozer, 1962;Miall, 1979;Fyles, 1994). Fluvial dissection has resulted in relative relief that varies from less than 50 m to over 250 m. The interfluves and upper slopes are covered with an extensive but thin veneer of till and glacio-fluvial deposits. Much of the lowland landscape consists of broad fluvial surfaces, probably formed by melt-water that flowed westwards away from the decaying Laurentide ice sheet to the east. The most deeply dissected terrain occurs in the central, north-central and southcentral parts of the island where relatively more cohesive shale and sandstone of the Christopher and Eureka Sound Formations are exposed in the valleys of the Thomsen, Kellett, Sachs and Masik Rivers. An extensive area of hummocky moraine mantles the eastern side of the island; this reflects the western edge of the Laurentide ice sheet.
On eastern Prince Patrick Island, outcrops of Paleozoic shale and sandstone produce structurally-controlled uplands subject to frost action and weathering. Here, the terrain is typically covered with a veneer of angular frost-shattered debris. On central and western Prince Patrick Island, desert-like terrain occurs on sediments composed of sands and gravels of the Beaufort Formation (Tozer and Thorsteinsson, 1964;Fyles, 1990). Undulating terrain with a relative relief of between 100 and 200 m is characterized by gentle slopes and shallow drainage channels that grade westwards towards the Arctic Ocean where they merge into broad alluvial surfaces, outwash fans and sandy plains. This terrain is devoid of striking landform features except for thermal-contraction-crack polygons.

Permafrost, ground ice and water bodies
Both islands are underlain by permafrost. Deep temperature measurements have been made at only one locality, the Storkerson Bay 1-15 exploratory well site located ~110 km north of Sachs Harbour. There, the mean annual ground temperature at the depth of zero annual amplitude is -13.1ºC and permafrost thickness is approximately 250 m (Taylor and Judge, 1977). At Mould Bay, the similar temperature measurement is ~ -14ºC. In all probability, maximum permafrost thicknesses exceed 300-500 m on both islands. Typically, maximum active-layer thicknesses on both islands vary between 50 and 75 cm, depending upon local site conditions.
In regions of continuous and thick permafrost, the presence of water bodies can result in unfrozen zones or taliks. This is certainly the case for Banks Island where numerous lakes and ponds exist and where large rivers, such as the Thomsen, Bernard and Big Rivers drain the central and western lowlands. On Prince Patrick Island, few water bodies or rivers are of sufficient size to induce the formation of taliks.
Ground ice is an important component of permafrost. On Banks Island, ground ice exposures are usually rare and short-lived. Gullies formed by fluvio-thermal erosion along the lines of ice wedges and undercut stream banks provide the best opportunities to observe ground-ice. Coastal exposures are useful ) but rare because significant periods of open-water conditions are limited to the southwest corner of Banks Island. The presence of numerous thaw lakes ) and the occurrence of man-induced thermokarst (French, 1975b(French, , 1978 suggest that ground ice amounts are high. On Prince Patrick Island, knowledge of ground ice is limited.

Snow, soil and vegetation
Intense winter cold and an absence of sunlight for several months of the year inhibit plant growth. Thus, ecologists refer to the vegetated but treeless arctic as tundra. But where the vegetation is very sparse, the tundra progressively changes into polar semidesert or polar desert. Table 3 shows the vegetation zonation of the two islands in the context of the biogeographical zones and major vegetation types within the Eurasian and North American Arctic. Botanists were the first to draw attention to the close relationship that exists between vegetation, snow and wind in the Western Canadian arctic (Porsild, 1955, 60-67;Porsild, 1957, 5-7) (Fig. 2). So-called 'snowbed' habitats are favoured localities for vegetation growth. They also enhance the activity of mass-wasting processes. Snow (moisture) is also the pivotal variable in the formation of 'patchy wetlands' (Woo and Young, 2003). Other favoured habitats for vegetation growth are gullies, poorly-drained valley bottoms and low-level fluvial terraces. The mixing of the tundra and polar desert landscapes is largely controlled by topography, parent material and drainage. For example, Figure 3 illustrates how the more sandy the parent material is, the greater is the percentage of the High Arctic landscape that is polar desert. The transition is through so-called 'soils of the hummocky ground' or 'soils of the polar desert-tundra interjacence' (Tedrow, 1974). Saline and alkaline soil conditions are characteristic of the transition and of the polar desert terrain; typically, salt crusts and efflorescence form after several days of rainfree, windy conditions (Tedrow, 1966) and carbonates may be precipitated on the lower sides of rock fragments.
The lowlands of central and western Banks Island are a classic illustration of the intermixing of the tundra and polar semi-desert landscapes. Areas of closed vegetation constitutes anywhere between 60 and 90% of the island landscape. Although woody shrubs occur in sheltered localities, trees are absent. The progressive transition from bog and sedge-moss tundra in the lowlands to cushion plant-lichen communities on the uplands is usually accomplished by a gentle slope upon which earth hummocks are widespread (Tedrow and Douglas, 1964). A similar but more abrupt transition occurs on Prince Patrick Island (Tedrow et al., 1968) where the vegetation cover is often less than 10% and areas of wellvegetated tundra are restricted to depressions and areas adjacent to drainage channels. Typically, the polar desert vegetation shows little variation from place to place and the plants are small, close to the ground and often widely separated with bare soil or rock in between. There is a progressive change from lowland terrain dominated by cryptogam-herb and moss graminoid tundra to simple herb barrens on the uplands. The extreme growth environments are (a) late-lying snow banks where the growing season is extremely short and (b) windswept dry ridges and interfluves. Here, plants tend to be either cryptogams (mosses in snowbed sites) or crustose lichens on ridges and summits.

The role of wind
The direct role of wind in fashioning the landscapes of the two islands is relatively small (Pissart, 1966;French, 1972b). This opinion is at variance with the traditional importance attached to wind by the early explorers of Polar Regions. It should be noted that many of these early accounts are from areas adjacent to either large ice sheets or high mountains, or both, such as Antarctica and northern Greenland, where strong katabatic winds are common. Neither Banks Island nor Prince Patrick Island is located in close proximity to either large ice sheets and/or high mountains. Thus, the magnitudes and consistencies of wind direction, speed and duration are unremarkable (Table 4).

Figure 3. The typical soil transition between tundra and polar desert landscapes: (A) -a diagrammatic plot showing that the sandier the parent material the greater is the percentage of polar desert; (B) -a sketch showing how the transition from tundra to polar desert terrain depends upon relief, parent material and moisture conditions. Diagrams A and B are modified
after Tedrow, 1974. The photo (C) shows the typical slope hummocks on northern Banks Island that characterize the terrain transition from wet tundra in lowlands to polar semi-desert conditions on upper slopes and interfluves. The photo is by H. M. French. , 1953-1972, Sachs Harbour, 1955-1972. From Maxwell, 1980. It follows that corrasion by blowing ice crystals, often cited as the important wind-abrading agent in high latitudes, is relatively unimportant. Although winter temperatures drop below -25ºC to -30ºC for several months each year on the islands and a Mohs hardness of 3-4 might reasonably be expected for blowing ice crystals, monthly wind speeds during that period are less than 20 km/hr. Furthermore, in the coldest period of the year (December-February), there is only a 5% probability of hourly wind speed in excess of 37-44 km/h (see Table 4). This probably explains why windfacetted pebbles are not found. In fact, the main geomorphic effect of the wind is to (1) remove fine particles from bare surfaces and interfluves during winter, (2) encourage the formation of saline and alkaline soil through the rise of capillary moisture, and (3) redistribute snow and wind-blown sediment to gullies and valley bottoms where these sediments form localised niveo-aeolian deposits in spring as the snow ablates (Pissart, 1966). Additionally, on Banks Island, many bare alluvial surfaces within the larger river valleys experience local, thermally-induced, winds in summer ('dust devils') that cause deflation and cover-sand deposition .

Table 4. Wind speed (km/hr) and duration (values of hourly wind speed (km/hr) equalled or exceeded at a given probability level), Mould Bay
The indirect effects of wind are more subtle and most obvious on Banks Island where the northwest and southwest corners experience consistent southwesterly winds coming from the southern Beaufort Sea. The preferential accumulation of snow on the lee (east-facing) slopes results is the asymmetry of stream valleys in the extreme northwest (French, 1970(French, , 1971a while the formation of oriented (D-shaped) thaw lakes in the Sachs River lowlands of southwest Banks Island is thought to be related to the dominant wind directions(s)   Thomsen River lowlands, north-central Banks Island, July 1977(see Lewkowicz, 1983 French and Dutkiewicz, 1976 French, 1978). The lack of terrain disturbance around the site reflects the absence of vegetation and minimal ground ice. All photos by H. M. French.

Rivers and valleys
The lowland tundra of Banks Island is one of gentle hills and broad valleys currently drained by snowmelt-derived waters. The majority of rivers, such as the Bernard, Storkerson, Big and Kellett Rivers, flow northwestwards towards the Beaufort Sea. Discharge is concentrated during a few weeks in late spring. Braided steam channels are typical and reflect a combination of the predominantly nival discharge and the high sediment load derived from the weakly consolidated sands and gravels that underlie the central lowlands. The exception is the Thomsen River, the longest on the island that flows northwards for much of its length in a single channel to exit in Castel Bay and M'Clure Strait. The lack of braiding is best explained by the low sediment load resulting from the cohesive nature of the shale bedrock that underlies much of this catchment.
The drainage is clearly misfit because extensive low fluvial terraces occur in most valleys, and large palaeo-outwash surfaces and abandoned meltwater channels can be recognized. If the central and western lowlands had been ice-free during the Late Wisconsin, as suggested by Vincent (1982;, the drainage pattern can be interpreted to reflect meltwater drainage from the ablating Late Wisconsinan ice sheet to the east. But if a cold-based ice cover had been present, as suggested by England et al. (2009) and Lakeman and England (2014), the drainage may reflect the in-situ disintegration of this ice cover. Anomalous drainage patterns and the seemingly random occurrence of glacigenic sediments, kame-like features and scattered erratics over the central lowlands support this interpretation. Only the simple dendritic drainage pattern of the never-glaciated Beaufort Plain, consisting of a series of northwestward-flowing streams with a striking asymmetry of valley side slopes, appears to reflect a quasi geomorphic equilibrium.
The polar semi-desert landscape of Prince Patrick Island also gives the appearance of a fluvially-fashioned landscape. Braided streams within shallow box-shaped channels are typical. During winter, the stream channels are filled with wind-blown snow while upland surface are blown clear of snow; snowmelt in spring is rapid and by early summer most stream channels are largely dry (Pissart, 1967b). In the western lowlands broad alluvial surfaces have been formed by the coalescing of large braided stream channels. Evidence of larger discharges in the past is given by extensive outwash fans and broad fluvial channels that are probably associated with the decay of local ice caps on the higher elevations.

Frost action, mass wasting and patterned ground
Direct frost action, in the form of mechanical weathering, is more obvious on uplands underlain by coherent Paleozoic and Mesozoic age bedrock than on lowlands developed upon unconsolidated sands, silts and gravels. For example, outcrops of Paleozoic shale and sandstone on the eastern side of Prince Patrick Island produce structurallycontrolled uplands subject to frost action and weathering. Here, the ground surface is typically covered with a veneer of angular frost-shattered debris. Although frost wedging (ice segregation) is known to be an effective mechanism for rock disintegration, others, such as either thermal stress or 'explosive shattering', may be equally important in this arid, polar desert environment. In areas of silty regolith, and where sufficient moisture is present, annual freezing and thawing can lead to the formation of sorted and non-sorted circles But, in general, the polar semi-desert terrain of Prince Patrick Island lacks the widespread development of the patterned ground features that characterise more humid cold environments.
On the poorly-drained tundra lowlands of Banks Island, the most common form of patterned ground is the non-sorted circle, or mudboil. On the gentle upper slopes, solifluction and slopewash processes are widespread, especially at and below snow-bank sites. Rates of solifluction movement range from between 0.5 and 2.0 cm/yr (French, 1974a;Egginton and French, 1985). By moving material from higher to lower elevations solifluction forms sheets and lobes and contributes to a general flattening of the landscape. Erosion by overland flow is also widespread, especially at and below snow-bank sites. For example, estimates of erosion via suspended sediment in north-central Banks Island suggest between 1 and 5 mm/1000 years is normal but this probably increases to between 10 to 50 mm/1000 years in bare areas more characteristic of the polar desert (Lewkowicz, 1983;Lewkowicz and Kokelj, 2002). Where concentrated on low-angled slopes, surface flow erodes shallow linear depressions colonized by vascular plants (Salix sp., Dryas sp.); this results in nonsorted stripes, 0.5-1.0 m in width. Rapid mass movements, such as active-layer-detachment failures, are restricted to areas where shale of the Christopher Formation outcrops. These occur usually when summer rain has led to prior saturation of the overlying active layer. The high ice content at the active layer-permafrost interface accentuates and promotes slippage. Retrogressive thaw slumping, where headwall retreat may average several metres a year, is widespread on the hummocky morainal terrain of eastern Banks Island (French and Egginton, 1973;French, 1974b); these slumps are usually initiated when buried glacier ice bodies become exposed by fluvial erosion.

Permafrost-related features
On Banks Island, extensive and poorly-drained river terraces and floodplains are characterised by thermal-contraction-crack polygons. Some are depressed centre (so-called 'fortress', or thermokarst) polygons and most are underlain by epigenetic ice wedges. However, exposures of the wedge ice are rare. Typically, exposures are caused by fluvio-thermal erosion that operates preferentially along the ice wedges in the early spring. On sloping terrain, the upper slopes probably contain anti-syngenetic wedges, as described by Mackay (1995).
Ground ice amounts on the Banks Island tundra can only be approximated. Judging by conditions in the Sachs River lowlands, ice may constitute ~50-55% of the upper 8.0 m of permafrost . Almost certainly, this explains the numerous thermokarst lakes and ponds that cover the tundra; most are small, less than 200-300 m in diameter and generally shallow, less than 2.0-3.0 m deep. The majority do not show any preferential orientation, the only exception being the preferred D-shaped thaw lakes of the Sachs River lowlands. A few of the larger lakes on the island are not thermokarstic in origin; these do not freeze to their bottom in winter and are well known to residents of Sachs Harbour because they usually contain arctic char and trout.
Frost mounds on the Banks Island tundra are neither as large nor as numerous as those in the well-known Mackenzie Delta region. At least 15-20 closed-system (hydrostatic) pingos have been recognized; most are small and partially collapsed, some form elongate esker-like ridges and few, if any, are actively growing. The vast majority are located on fluvial terraces and abandoned river channels within the major valleys. All these features probably formed following freezing of sub-river taliks that must have existed beneath the deeper portions of rivers when discharges were higher than today (Pissart and French, 1976;French and Dutkiewicz, 1976). Radiocarbon dates suggest pingo growth on Banks Island occurred between ~5.0 ka and ~2.5 ka (see French et al., 1982, Table 1). The remnants of seasonal frost mounds can also be seen on many river terraces (French, 1975a(French, , 1976 and the active formation of icing blisters can be observed today in winter on current floodplains (e.g. see French, 2007).
The range of permafrost-related landforms on Prince Patrick Island is far more limited. This must reflect the generally lower ground-ice amounts. In the absence of reliable field data, one must assume that ice volumes within the upper 5-10 m are as little as 10-15%. This assumption is supported by the minimal levels of terrain disturbance that occurred during the drilling of exploratory oil wells in the 1970s at a number of polar semi-desert sites on Prince Patrick (French, 1978, 21-22). For example, on Prince Patrick Island, the Elf Dyer Bay I-59 well was located on a sandy gravelly outwash surface underlain by sand and gravel of the Beaufort Formation. Drilling and site restoration were completed without significant environmental or terrain problems. A similar situation occurred at the Elfex et al Ltd Wilkie Point J-51 well, located on terrain underlain by sandstone of the Wilkie Point Formation. Both sites illustrate the barren and inhospitable nature of much of the polar semi-desert landscape of Prince Patrick Island.
Thermal-contraction-crack polygons, 10-20 m in size, characterize the western and central parts of the island. Limited field observations indicate that wedges of sand and gravel, and not wedges of ice, underlie the polygons (Pissart, 1968). They appear similar to the sandwedge polygons described from Antarctica (Péwé, 1959). However, smaller polygons, 2-4 m in dimensions, occur in shale bedrock near Mould Bay and may be the result of desiccation. Thaw lakes, thermokarst phenomena, and other visible signs of ground ice are largely lacking on Prince Patrick Island. An exception is the presence of a number of partially-collapsed and elongate pingo-like forms (Pissart, 1967a). Many appear similar to those on Banks Island (see above). Some are especially problematic and appear related to deep-seated faults in the underlying Palaeozoic rocks (see Fig. 1). One suggestion is that these are ancient pingos, or ice hydrolaccoliths, formed by water movement along these faults (Pissart and French, 1974). Their precise age and origin is problematic.

Conclusions
The periglacial landscapes of Banks Island and Prince Patrick Island reflect both structural control and the cold, arid climate currently experienced. Technically, both islands are cold deserts. Although the Quaternary glacial history of this part of the Western Canadian Arctic is still not fully understood, it must be assumed that the majority of terrain on both islands has experienced cold non-glacial (periglacial) conditions for much of the Quaternary. As such, their landscapes must be regarded as being in quasi-equilibrium. However, geomorphic investigations are relatively few, especially on Prince Patrick Island, and further studies are required. Landscape observations need to be interpreted within the context of the intimate relationships that exist between low temperature, aridity, snow, frozen ground, wind and vegetation.