Arctic
Feedback Dynamics Presentation by David Wasdell
Part
1
Part
2
This article posits seismic activity as a possible explanation for high levels of methane being released
Is
Global Warming breaking up the Integrity of the Permafrost?
23
May, 2013
Permafrost
was long thought to act as a cap preventing methane from hydrates to
enter the atmosphere. For many years, University of Alaska Fairbanks
scientists Natalia Shakhova and Igor Semiletov studied methane
emissions in the Arctic Ocean. In a 2010
press release,
Shakhova said: "The amount of methane currently coming out of
the East Siberian Arctic Shelf is comparable to the amount coming out
of the entire world's oceans. Subsea permafrost is losing its ability
to be an impermeable cap."
Is
something similar happening to the permafrost in Antarctica and on
the Himilayan Plateau? The chart below shows very high methane levels
over Antarctica in April and May 2013. High levels of methane over
Antarctica were recorded before in 2013, as described in an earlier
post
at the methane-hydrates blog....[ ]
Are
these high methane levels indications that global warming is breaking
up the integrity of the permafrost in Antarctica as well?
The
Himalayan Plateau, also known as the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau, or the
world’s “third pole”, is located in central Asia and also
contains huge quantities of permafrost. Methane hydrates were
discovered on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau in September 2009 in
quantities estimated "to equal at least 35 billion tonnes of
oil", according to a 2010 Xinhuanet
report.
The
above chart with Antarctic daily peak methane readings gives an
estimate for the highest methane reading over Antarctica on April 26,
2013. This because Antarctica didn’t appear to have the highest
reading on that day, when methane readings were recorded of 2405 ppb
at 469 mb pressure and of 2475 ppb at 367 mb pressure. The methane
that caused these readings appears to originate from the Himalayan
Plateau,
What
could have caused such extremely high methane emissions?
Could
the methane have been released from wetlands? It was very hot around
that time in South Asia, as illustrated by the image below showing
temperatures in degrees Celsius for April 28, 2013. But the emissions
appear to originate from an area with little vegetation, which also
appears to rule out burning of biomass waste from rice productions as
a cause
Another explanation for such high methane readings is that they were caused by earthquakes. The image below shows a string of earthquakes that hit China, including a magnitude 6.6 quake on April 20, 2013, and a magnitude 5.3 quake on April 24, 2013..
It
could be that the earthquakes lead to large methane releases from
ruptured natural gas pipes and tanks. On the other hand, the methane
releases appear to occur over a large area well next to the epicenter
of the earthquakes, as shown on the animation below.
Also, methane releases associated with such a natural disaster would have been a one-off event. High methane levels did occur before over the Himalayan Plateau, as illustrated by the image below showing readings for several days in 2013 at the same altitude, including a reading of 2235 ppb on February 1, 2013
Such
recurring high readings could indicate that methane is bubbling up
through the permafrost at the Himalayan Plateau. Shockwaves caused by
the earthquakes could have accelerated the movement of free gas
through the top layers of permafrost and they could also have caused
destabilization of one or more methane hydrates, resulting in large
abrupt release of methane into the atmosphere on April 26.
Loss
of the integrity of the permafrost is particularly threatening in the
Arctic, where the sea ice looks set to disappear within years,
resulting in huge albedo changes in summer. Decrease of surface
reflectivity results in increases in absorption of energy from
sunlight and decreases in shortwave radiation in the atmosphere. The
latter results in lower photo-dissociation rates of tropospheric
gases. Photo-dissociation of the ozone molecule is the major process
that leads to the production of OH (hydroxyl radical), the main
oxidizing (i.e., cleansing) gas species in the troposphere. A 2009
NASA study
projects this to lead to a decrease in OH concentrations and a
weakening of the oxidizing capacity of the Arctic troposphere,
further increasing the vulnerability of the Arctic to warming in case
of additional methane releases.
Levels
of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and methane are already
very high in the Arctic atmosphere, while large quantities of black
carbon get deposited on snow and ice, further contributing to the
albedo changes. This threatens to result in rapid summer warming of
many parts of the Arctic Ocean with very shallow waters.
Additionally, rivers can bring increasingly warm water into those
shallow seas in summer, adding to the threat that heat will penetrate
the seabed that contains huge quantities of methane.
Above
image, earlier included in a post at the Arctic-news
blog,
shows methane concentrations on January 23, 2013, when a reading of
2241 ppb was recorded in the Arctic.
Analysis
of sediment cores collected in 2009 from under ice-covered Lake
El'gygytgyn in the northeast Russian Arctic suggest
that, last time the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere was
about as high as it is today (roughly 3.5 to 2 million years ago),
regional precipitation was three times higher and summer temperatures
were about 15 to 16 degrees Celsius (59 to 61 degrees Fahrenheit), or
about 8 degrees Celsius (14.4 degrees Fahrenheit) warmer than today.
As
temperatures rose back in history, it is likely that a lot of methane
will have vented from hydrates in the Arctic, yet without causing
runaway warming. Why not? The rise in temperature then is likely to
have taken place slowly over many years. While on occasion this may
have caused large abrupt releases of methane, the additional methane
from such releases could each time be broken down within decades,
also because global methane levels in the atmosphere were much lower
than today.
In
conclusion, the situation today is much more threatening,
particularly in the East Siberian Arctic Shelf (ESAS), as further
described in the earlier post methane
hydrates.
For
the rest of the article GO
HERE
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