http://arctic-news.blogspot.co.uk/2012/04/highlights-of-egu-general-assembly-2012.html?m=1

Highlights of EGU General Assembly 2012

If you will be attending the European Geosciences Union (EGU) General
Assembly on April 25, 2012, make sure to attend, from 14:00 to 14:15 in
room 23, the presentation:

Methane release from the East-Siberian Arctic Shelf and its connection with
permafrost and hydrate destabilization: First results and potential future
developments by Natalia Shakhova and Igor Semiletov

The East Siberian Arctic Shelf (ESAS) is home to the world’s largest
hydrocarbon stocks, which consist of natural gas, coal bed methane (CH4),
and shallow Arctic hydrates. Until recently, the ESAS was not considered a
CH4 source due to the supposed impermeability of sub-sea permafrost, which
was thought to completely isolate the CH4 beneath from modern
biogeochemical cycles.

However, the ESAS represents an enormous potential CH4 source that could be
responsive to ongoing global warming. Such response could occur in
substantially shorter time than that of terrestrial Arctic ecosystems,
because sub-sea permafrost has experienced long-lasting destabilization
initiated by its inundation during the Holocene ocean transgression. ESAS
permafrost stability and integrity is key to whether sequestered ancient
carbon escapes as the potent greenhouse gas CH4.

Recent data suggest the sub-sea permafrost is currently experiencing
significant changes in its thermal regime. For example, our recent data
obtained in the ESAS during the drilling expedition of 2011 showed no
frozen sediments at all within the 53 m long drilling core at water
temperatures varying from -0.6˚C to -1.3˚C.

Unfrozen sediments provide multiple potential CH4 migration pathways. We
suggest that open taliks have formed beneath the areas underlain or
influenced by the nearby occurrence of fault zones, under paleo-valleys, and
beneath thaw lakes submerged several thousand years ago during the ocean
transgression. Temporary gas migration pathways might occur subsequent to
seismic and tectonic activity in an area, due to sediment settlement and
subsidence; hydrates could destabilize due to development of
thermokarst-related features or ice-scouring.

Recently obtained geophysical data identified numerous gas seeps, mostly
above prominent reflectors, and the ubiquitous occurrence of shallow
gas-charged sediments containing numerous gas chimneys, underscoring the
likelihood that the ability of sub-sea permafrost to capture CH4 released
from the seabed is failing.

Available data suggest the ESAS sub-sea permafrost is currently leaking a
substantial amount of CH4. We propose that a few different types of CH4
exist, and are becoming involved in the modern carbon cycle due to
permafrost destabilization in the ESAS: modern biogenic CH4 produced from
ancient substrate, relatively old biogenic CH4 mobilized from hydrate
deposits, and old thermogenic CH4 accumulated within seabed deposits.
Isotopic data obtained by sampling CH4 in the water column and atmospheric
CH4 in close proximity to the sea surface confirm the contribution from
different sources, and demonstrate that the isotopic signature of CH4 from
the ESAS can be used to create an interpretive plot for defining hydrates.
CH4 fluxes could occur as numerous weak seeps, as large areas of strong
bubble plumes, or as sites where CH4 releases are flare- or torch-like and
the emissions are non-gradual.

Due to the shallow and oligotrophic nature of the ESAS, the majority of
aqueous CH4 may avoid biological oxidation in the water column and escape
to the atmosphere.

Further investigations should be focused on quantifying the total CH4 pool
of the ESAS, improving our understanding of the mechanisms responsible for
sub-sea permafrost destabilization and gas migration pathways formation,
and decreasing uncertainties regarding the current CH4 emission mode and
its future alteration by progressing permafrost degradation.

Geophysical Research Abstracts Vol. 14, EGU2012-3877-1, 2012 EGU General
Assembly 2012

Above presentation is part of the session: Methane cycling in marine and
terrestrial systems which also features, as part of the poster program:
Display Time: Wednesday, 25 Apr 08:00–19:30 Attendance Time: Wednesday, 25
Apr 17:30–19:00 Poster Area BG

First drilling subsea permafrost in the southeastern Laptev Sea, the East
Siberian Arctic Shelf: results and challenges by Igor Semiletov, et al.
highlighting the following two challenges:

1) observed Arctic warming in early 21st century is stronger than predicted
by several degrees, which may accelerate thaw release of methane from the
upper seafloor layer by increasing bottom erosion and from deeper stratums
(including hydrates) by sediment settlement and adjustment;

2) drastic sea ice shrinkage causes increase in storm activities and
deepening of the wind-wave-mixing layer down to depth ~50 m that enhance
methane release from the water column to the atmosphere.

Geophysical Research Abstracts Vol. 14, EGU2012-3913, 2012 EGU General
Assembly 2012

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/geoengineering?hl=en.

Reply via email to