More than 150,000 methane seeps appear as Arctic ice retreats
Lauren Morello, E&E reporter
Published: Tuesday, May 22, 2012


Scientists have found more than 150,000 sites in the Arctic where methane is 
seeping into the atmosphere, according to a report published Sunday in the 
journal Nature Geoscience.

Aerial and ground surveys in Alaska and Greenland revealed that many of the 
methane seeps are located in areas where glaciers are receding or permafrost is 
thawing as the climate warms, removing ice that has trapped the potent 
greenhouse gas in the ground.

Researchers at the University of Alaska and Florida State University say the 
amount of methane being released from the seeps now is relatively small but 
could grow in coming decades as climate change intensifies, shrinking the ice 
that has prevented ancient deposits of the heat-trapping gas from reaching the 
atmosphere.

"As permafrost thaws and glaciers retreat, it is going to let something out 
that has had a lid on it," said lead author Katey Walter Anthony of the 
University of Alaska.

Scientists have long known of the existence of methane seeps in the Arctic, but 
the new study is one of the first to map them over large areas.

Walter Anthony and her colleagues used airplanes to fly over 6,700 lakes in 
Alaska during the winters of 2008, 2009 and 2010.

The survey revealed 77 previously unknown seep sites, which the scientists 
narrowed down to 50 lakes they visited on foot.

They documented the seeps they found, using carbon-dating to determine the age 
of methane released at the sites. The scientists performed the same analysis at 
25 lakes in western Greenland.

Seep sites in Alaska tended to occur where permafrost is thawing or at the 
edges of receding glaciers. In Greenland, the scientists found seeps in places 
where glaciers have retreated over the past 150 years, since the end of the 
Little Ice Age.

The researchers calculate that methane seeps in Alaska alone are releasing 
250,000 metric tons of methane into the atmosphere each year, 50 to 70 percent 
more than previously estimated.

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