Results/Conclusions: In MAT, the AR fire consumed1.38 ± 0.27 kg C /m2 (mean ± 1SE), ranging from 0.4 to 5.80 kg C /m2, and 38 ± 10 g N /m2, ranging from 10 to 210 g N /m2. We estimate that burning of MAT emitted approximately 828,000 tons C and 22,000 tons N. Radiocarbon dating of residual soils revealed that while fire consumed as much as 1230 years of accumulated C inputs to soil organic matter in severely burned sites, the average consumption was about 30 years of accumulated C. Concurrent N losses represented 300 to >1000 years of N accumulation as estimated from current rates of atmospheric deposition and biological N fixation. In lightly and moderately burned sites, >30% of C loss came from aboveground vegetation, suggesting that these sites may recover plant and soil pools relatively rapidly. In severely burned sites, however, nitrogen constraints on the C cycle and the slow rate of soil organic matter accumulation make it unlikely that C pools will recover to pre-fire levels over the next millennia. Our results suggest that in MAT, intensification of the fire regime is likely to lead to threshold changes in ecosystem functions that feedback to climate and impact the wellbeing of humans and other animals that inhabit Alaska’s North Slope.