Where
does the methane come from?
2
August, 2013
[
image July 29, 2013. Click on image to enlarge ]
|
Wildfires
are still raging, sending huge amounts of smoke into the sky.
Worryingly, much black carbon that comes with this smoke gets
deposited at high latitudes, discoloring snow and ice, and thus
speeding up the melt.
A lot of methane has been emitted over the last few days, and much appears to be due to wildfires, as illustrated by the image below, picturing the situation on July 31, 2013, p.m.
A lot of methane has been emitted over the last few days, and much appears to be due to wildfires, as illustrated by the image below, picturing the situation on July 31, 2013, p.m.
[
click on image to enlarge ]
|
Above
image shows some methane on the right, over the Atlantic Ocean, which
appears to originate from these wildfires and is visible in that
location due to the Coriolis
effect.
The image below, picturing the situation on August 1, 2013, p.m.,
shows a lot of methane over Russia and elsewhere in Europe and Asia.
Again, the methane on the left of Europe appears to originate from
wildfires in North America.
[
click on image to enlarge ]
|
High
levels of methane are recorded in many places on the Northern
Hemisphere, and there is also a lot over the Southern Hemisphere, as
illustrated by the image below.
[
click on image to enlarge ]
|
Where
did the methane over the oceans on the Southern Hemisphere come from?
It appears that it originates from hydrates under the ocean floor.
For more about methane hydrates, also see the methane-hydrates
blog.
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