"The
lid has been pulled of the can and the carbon and in this case
methane is being released and this will now never stop , accelerate
and release gigatonnes of methane. Welcome to abrupt climate change
and the attendant chaos the will result to the worlds weather
patterns"
---Kevin
Hester
Every day a wealth of material is coming out with predictions of the future of climate change as well as of abrupt climate change happening in real time.
In the meantime events in the mundane world of civilised humans is heading for a perfect storm.
I have not been paying so much attention, partially because two of my main sources, Robertscribbler and the Arctic News, have been quiet recently.
Methane is leaking from permafrost offshore Siberia
Kara Sea is a section of the Arctic Ocean between Novaya Zemlya and the Yamal Peninsula on the Siberian mainland. Siberian permafrost extends to the seabed of the Kara Sea, and it is thawing.
22
December, 2014
Yamal
Peninsula in Siberia has recently become world famous. Spectacular
sinkholes, appeared as out of nowhere in the permafrost of the area,
sparking the speculations of significant release of greenhouse gas
methane into the atmosphere.
What
is less known, is that there is a lot of greenhouse gas methane
released from the seabed offshore the West Yamal Peninsula. Gas is
released in an area of at least 7500 m2, with gas flares extending up
to 25 meters in the water column. Anyhow, there is still a large
amount of methane gas that is contained by an impermeable cap of
permafrost. And this permafrost is thawing.
"The
thawing of permafrost on the ocean floor is an ongoing process,
likely to be exaggerated by the global warming of the world´s
oceans." says PhD Alexey Portnov at Centre for Arctic Gas
Hydrate, Climate and Environment (CAGE) at UiT, The Arctic University
of Norway.
Portnov
and his colleagues have recently published two papers about
permafrost offshore West Yamal, in the Kara Sea. Papers look into the
extent of permafrost on the ocean floor and how it is connected to
the significant release of the greenhouse gas methane.
Permanently
frozen soil
Permafrost,
as the word implies, is the soil permanently frozen for two or more
years. For something to stay permanently frozen, the temperature must
of course stay bellow 0°C.
"Terrestrial
Arctic is always frozen, average ground temperatures are low in
Siberia which maintains permafrost down to 600-800 meters ground
depth. But the ocean is another matter. Bottom water temperature is
usually close to or above zero. Theoretically, therefore, we could
never have thick permafrost under the sea," says Portnov
"However, 20 000 years ago, during the last glacial maximum, the
sea level dropped to minus 120 meters. It means that today´s shallow
shelf area was land. It was Siberia. And Siberia was frozen. The
permafrost on the ocean floor today was established in that period.
Last
glacial maximum was the period in the history of the planet when ice
sheets covered significant part of the Northern hemisphere. These ice
sheets profoundly impacted Earth's climate, causing drought,
desertification, and a dramatic drop in sea levels. Most likely the
Yamal Peninsula was not covered with ice, but it was exposed to
extremely cold conditions.
When
the ice age ended some 12 000 years ago, and the climate warmed up,
the ocean levels increased. Permafrost was submerged under the ocean
water, and started it´s slow thawing. One of the reasons it has not
thawed completely so far, is that bottom water temperatures are low,
some - 0,5 degrees . That could very well change.
A
fragile seal that is leaking
It
was previously proposed that the permafrost in the Kara Sea, and
other Arctic areas, extends to water depths up to 100 meters,
creating a seal that gas cannot bypass. Portnov and collegues have
found that the West Yamal shelf is leaking, profoundly, at depths
much shallower than that.
Significant
amount of gas is leaking at depths between 20 and 50 meters. This
suggests that a continuous permafrost seal is much smaller than
proposed. Close to the shore the permafrost seal may be few hundred
meters thick, but tapers off towards 20 meters water depth. And it is
fragile.
"The
permafrost is thawing from two sides. The interior of the Earth is
warm and is warming the permafrost from the bottom up. It is called
geothermal heat flux and it is happening all the time, regardless of
human influence. " says Portnov.
Evolution
of permafrost
Portnov
used mathematical models to map the evolution of the permafrost, and
thus calculate its degradation since the end of the last ice age. The
evolution of permafrost gives indication to what may happen to it in
the future.
If
the bottom ocean temperature is 0,5°C, the maximal possible
permafrost thickness would likely take 9000 years to thaw. But if
this temperature increases, the process would go much faster, because
the thawing also happens from the top down.
"If
the temperature of the oceans increases by two degrees as suggested
by some reports, it will accelerate the thawing to the extreme. A
warming climate could lead to an explosive gas release from the
shallow areas."
Permafrost
keeps the free methane gas in the sediments. But it also stabilizes
gas hydrates, ice-like structures that usually need high pressure and
low temperature to form.
"Gas
hydrates normally form in water depths over 300 meters, because they
depend on high pressure. But under permafrost the gas hydrate may
stay stable even where the pressure is not that high, because of the
constantly low temperatures."
Gas
hydrates contain huge amount of methane gas, and it is
destabilization of these that is believed to have caused the craters
on the Yamal Peninsula.
###
References:
Portnov,
A. Mienert, J. Serov, P. 2014 Modeling the evolution of
climate-sensitive Arctic subsea permafrost in regions of extensive
gas expulsion at the West Yamal shelf. Journal
of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences 119
(11) http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2014JG002685/abstract
Also:
Portnov, A. et.al. 2013 Offshore permafrost decay and massive seabed
methane escape in water depths >20 m at the South Kara Sea
shelf. Geophysical
Research Letters 40
(15)
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/grl.50735/abstract
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/grl.50735/abstract
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