Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданиях › статья › Рецензирование
Methane release from carbonate rock formations in the Siberian permafrost area during and after the 2020 heat wave. / Froitzheim, Nikolaus; Majka, Jaroslaw; Zastrozhnov, Dmitry.
в: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Том 118, № 32, e2107632118, 02.08.2021.Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданиях › статья › Рецензирование
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Methane release from carbonate rock formations in the Siberian permafrost area during and after the 2020 heat wave
AU - Froitzheim, Nikolaus
AU - Majka, Jaroslaw
AU - Zastrozhnov, Dmitry
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2021 National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021/8/2
Y1 - 2021/8/2
N2 - Anthropogenic global warming may be accelerated by a positive feedback from the mobilization of methane from thawing Arctic permafrost. There are large uncertainties about the size of carbon stocks and the magnitude of possible methane emissions. Methane cannot only be produced from the microbial decay of organic matter within the thawing permafrost soils (microbial methane) but can also come from natural gas (thermogenic methane) trapped under or within the permafrost layer and released when it thaws. In the Taymyr Peninsula and surroundings in North Siberia, the area of the worldwide largest positive surface temperature anomaly for 2020, atmospheric methane concentrations have increased considerably during and after the 2020 heat wave. Two elongated areas of increased atmospheric methane concentration that appeared during summer coincide with two stripes of Paleozoic carbonates exposed at the southern and northern borders of the Yenisey-Khatanga Basin, a hydrocarbon-bearing sedimentary basin between the Siberian Craton to the south and the Taymyr Fold Belt to the north. Over the carbonates, soils are thin to nonexistent and wetlands are scarce. The maxima are thus unlikely to be caused by microbial methane from soils or wetlands. We suggest that gas hydrates in fractures and pockets of the carbonate rocks in the permafrost zone became unstable due to warming from the surface. This process may add unknown quantities of methane to the atmosphere in the near future.
AB - Anthropogenic global warming may be accelerated by a positive feedback from the mobilization of methane from thawing Arctic permafrost. There are large uncertainties about the size of carbon stocks and the magnitude of possible methane emissions. Methane cannot only be produced from the microbial decay of organic matter within the thawing permafrost soils (microbial methane) but can also come from natural gas (thermogenic methane) trapped under or within the permafrost layer and released when it thaws. In the Taymyr Peninsula and surroundings in North Siberia, the area of the worldwide largest positive surface temperature anomaly for 2020, atmospheric methane concentrations have increased considerably during and after the 2020 heat wave. Two elongated areas of increased atmospheric methane concentration that appeared during summer coincide with two stripes of Paleozoic carbonates exposed at the southern and northern borders of the Yenisey-Khatanga Basin, a hydrocarbon-bearing sedimentary basin between the Siberian Craton to the south and the Taymyr Fold Belt to the north. Over the carbonates, soils are thin to nonexistent and wetlands are scarce. The maxima are thus unlikely to be caused by microbial methane from soils or wetlands. We suggest that gas hydrates in fractures and pockets of the carbonate rocks in the permafrost zone became unstable due to warming from the surface. This process may add unknown quantities of methane to the atmosphere in the near future.
KW - Gas hydrate
KW - Global warming
KW - Permafrost
KW - Siberia
KW - Thermogenic methane
KW - global warming
KW - permafrost
KW - gas hydrate
KW - thermogenic methane
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85111811390&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1073/pnas.2107632118
DO - 10.1073/pnas.2107632118
M3 - Article
C2 - 34341110
AN - SCOPUS:85111811390
VL - 118
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
SN - 0027-8424
IS - 32
M1 - e2107632118
ER -
ID: 86063687