More and bigger sinkholes on Yamal tundra
The
biggest hole is now more than 60 meters wide and 200 meter deep.
By
Atle Staalesen
August
31, 2018
The
formations believed to be created by eruption of natural gas from the
ground are of growing concern both to researchers and the oil and gas
industry in the far Arctic peninsulas of Yamal and Gydan.
One
of the biggest formations is located only about four kilometers from
a gas pipeline leading from the huge Bovanenkovo field, a project
operated by Gazprom. This formation is now growing and has reached a
diameter of more than 60 meter and a depth of about 200 meters.
The
first sinkholes were discovered in 2014 and since then at least ten
big-size holes have been mapped. In addition, there are indications
that several more major holes are in the making. Researchers told RIA
Novosti that they on the two Arctic peninsulas have discovered
several small hills which they believe could be «gas bubbles» ready
to burst.
According
to researchers at the Institute of Earth Cryosphere in Tyumen, there
is methane gas seeping out from the formations.
Several
expeditions to the region have been made by institute
representatives. The quick changes in the formations have been
triggered by the abnormally warm summer of 2016, the researchers
concluded after an expedition in 2017.
The
areas in and around the peninsulas of Yamal and Gydan are believed to
be the only in the world where the phenomena take place. They are
triggered by melting of permafrost in the local unique geological and
natural conditions.
One
of the last eruptions of gas in the area came in late June 2017, when
a group of reindeer herders suddenly saw flaring flames and a column
of smoke in the distance from a village on the eastern coast of the
Yamal Peninsula.
The
gas eruptions could potentially create great damage to oil and gas
installations in the area, and companies have over the last couple of
years placed censors in the area which they hope will be able to tell
about new and upcoming sinkholes. The measurement instruments are now
on site in Bovenenkovo, Sabetta and Kharasavey, all of them key sites
for the gas industry in the area.
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