Siberian
Methane Release is on the Rise, and That's VERY Frightening
By
Brian Stallard
31
December, 2014
The
"End of the World" in the Sleeping Land: that's what people
have called the Yamal Peninsula, a relatively desolate region of
Siberia, for decades. This region has gained a lot of fame recently
as the home of massive
and semi-mysterious holes in
the ground. Now it will gain some infamy as well, as researchers are
finding that more and more harmful methane gas is escaping from the
region's thawing permafrost.
That's
at least according to a pair of studies recently published in
the Journal
of Geophysical Research andGeophysical
Research Letters,
which look into the extent of permafrost on the Siberian coastal
floor and how it is connected to the significant release of the
greenhouse gas methane - a gas that is capable of trapping heat in
our atmospheres with 20
times the efficiency of
carbon dioxide.
Siberia
is commonly referred to as the "Sleeping Land" because it's
rather still -
with its soil locked up in permafrost that, as the name implies, is not likely to melt.
with its soil locked up in permafrost that, as the name implies, is not likely to melt.
"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," Alexey Portnov, from The Arctic
University of Norway, explained in astatement via
the Center for Arctic Gas Hydrate, Climate and Environment.
"Theoretically,
therefore, we could never have thick permafrost under the sea.
However," he added, "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."
Now,
especially with changing trade winds, currents, and warming waters,
that submerged permafrost is melting faster and faster. And while the
consequential release of methane may help promote climate change, the
expert is quick to add that this wasn't caused by mankind's meddling
with nature.
"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," said Portnov.
However,
he adds, "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."
This,
Portnov and his colleagues propose, could have also helped facilitate
some of the mysterious
craters seen
back on the Yamal mainland, where massive pockets of released methane
could have forced themselves and/or ice formations straight through
hundreds of feet of earth. (Scroll
to read on...)
However,
if that's true, it's also very bad news for climatologists.
"If
even a small fraction of Arctic sea floor carbon is released to the
atmosphere, we're f'd," Jason
Box,
a widely published climatologist, tweeted back
in August, when it was first
revealed that
this could be occurring in the East Siberian Arctic Ocean.
That's
because ocean floor methane normally releases from vents and leaking
hydrates at a slower rate, allowing marine life to absorb the gas
before it can reach our atmosphere. However, if it's releasing
explosively, experts may be underestimating how much greenhouse gas
has been accumulating in our atmosphere.
And
that would just add to bad
news from the northwestern hemisphere,
where Pacific ocean hydrates have been found to be leaking methane
far more intensely than expected.
"The
thawing of permafrost on the ocean
floor is
an ongoing process, likely to be exaggerated by the global warming of
the world´s ocean," Portnov said.
This
could set the world into a vicious cycle of climbing carbon and ocean
temperature levels - one that experts were not prepared for. However,
just how extensively these releases will impact climate in the long
run remains to be seen.
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