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10930


Date: August 21, 2018 at 06:59:27
From: Shirley/PA, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Melting Arctic Could Rapidly Unlock 'Deep Carbon' Buried in Permafrost

URL: https://www.livescience.com/63380-arctic-lakes-melt-deep-permafrost.html


This is the game changer.

I'm not sure "disaster" covers the reality.

"August 20, 2018 01:00pm ET

Arctic lakes could release a vast reservoir of ancient carbon buried deep under the permanently frozen ground, or permafrost, thereby accelerating climate change.'

These lakes, which form when surface ice melts and the ground beneath it collapses, could thaw underground permafrost much faster than scientists thought was possible, a new study reveals. [Images of Melt: Earth's Vanishing Ice]

Previously, scientists thought the bulk of this deep thawing of Arctic permafrost would likely not happen until after 2100.

Climate change is taking hold in the Arctic faster than it is on the rest of the planet, and one of the biggest risks associated with warming temperatures in the region is permafrost melt.

The deep layers of permanently frozen soil that underlie much of the Arctic hide massive reservoirs of organic carbon, in the form of thousands of years' worth of trapped plant matter and even animal carcasses. As the soil gradually melts, these buried organisms will decay and release the greenhouse gases carbon dioxide and methane into the atmosphere, which can, in turn, lead to even more warming.

But most scientists believed it would take decades of warming to melt permafrost buried beneath the active layer of soil that freezes and thaws with the seasons.

"The conclusions that permafrost-carbon modelers were reaching was that, until you thaw really deep, we're not going to get this large, old carbon signal and that the really deep thaw of carbon on land is not going to happen until beyond 2100," study leader Katey Walter Anthony, an ecologist and biogeochemist at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, told Live Science. "What our study shows is that in a lake, you thaw that deep really fast on a scale of decades. Lakes tap into that old carbon much sooner, and they will release that permafrost carbon much sooner than that thaw on land."

Walter Anthony and her colleagues have been studying so-called thermokarst lakes, which are created when the ice-rich ground thaws, thus causing the earth underneath to collapse and form a pit, where the melted water pools. Thermokarst lakes often look like cookies that have been bitten around their edges, Walter Anthony explained, because the liquid water does indeed take bites out of the surrounding frozen margins, causing the lake to expand.

The lakes can also be up to 100 feet (30 meters) deep, and if the water doesn't freeze all the way to the bottom in the winter, the heat in the liquid water causes the permafrost beneath that lake to thaw, Walter Anthony said.

"As that permafrost thaws, we get what we call a thaw bulb, and that thaw bulb can deepen and expand laterally," Walter Anthony said. When that happens, "what was previously frozen soil with organic carbon in it becomes thawed, and that thawed soil releases this organic matter to microbes that decompose it and make carbon dioxide and methane."

The researchers wanted to quantify just how much methane —the major component of the gas bubbling up from the lakes —thermokarst lakes are emitting today and what their projected emissions are for the future. The team used a combination of computer models and measurements taken from fieldwork in Alaska, Canada and Siberia to map the growth and emissions of thermokarst lakes.

According to their results, published Aug. 15 in the journal Nature Communications, the lakes would double previous estimates of permafrost-caused greenhouse warming.

"It's still a lot smaller than fossil fuel emissions, but it's about equivalent to land-use change," which is the second-biggest source of human-caused climate change, Walter Anthony told Live Science.

Original article on Live Science" End complete quote.


Responses:
[10931] [10932] [10933] [10934]


10931


Date: August 21, 2018 at 07:15:21
From: Shirley/PA, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Permafrost: The Tipping Time Bomb - VIDEO

URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FLCgybStZ4g


This link was published on Feb 28, 2013 by Yale Climate Connections.

The last speaker is upbeat. Unfortunately we're now and have been for some time beyond his upbeat thoughts.

If we stopped all coal use; all gasoline engines; all wood burning; all pollution of any kind, it would not matter. The "tipping point" is behind us now.

Personally, I think it was behind us in 2013, too.

At 2:59 a scientist says: "There's no way to control it or stop it. It just go by itself."

Unfortunately, many of us and other living things are gonna go right along with it.


Responses:
[10932] [10933] [10934]


10932


Date: August 21, 2018 at 08:12:28
From: Shirley/PA, [DNS_Address]
Subject: The Sleeping Giant in Arctic Permafrost

URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6GXlxT7Vl_g


The reason I'm posting this is for the chart found at 1:53.

Stop it there.

Let that reality sink in.


Responses:
[10933] [10934]


10933


Date: August 21, 2018 at 08:53:03
From: Shirley/PA, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Global methane levels hitting new highs

URL: http://earthsky.org/earth/global-methane-levels-hitting-new-highs


"| July 19, 2017

When it comes to global warming, carbon dioxide is the 800-pound gorilla: it’s the most abundant of the long-lived greenhouse gases that human activities generate. But ounce for ounce, methane (CH4) traps more heat, and it accounts for about 20% of the greenhouse gases produced by human activities. Strangely, though, global methane levels “flat lined” from 1999 to 2006.


The plateau didn’t last, however, and in recent years, global methane levels have been hitting new highs. Figuring out what’s going on with methane is a high priority for carbon cycle experts at NOAA and other institutions around the world. Possibly the most important clue: air samples collected at different latitudes around the world show that the amount of methane carrying carbon-13—a rare, heavy isotope of carbon—has dropped significantly since 2007.

That drop casts doubt on one of the first explanations experts considered for the post-2007 rise: an increase in methane emitted from fossil fuels, including “fugitive” methane gas escaping during oil and natural gas drilling. Instead, the chemical fingerprints point toward agricultural and wetland emissions from the tropics.

A methane bomb…or not

Scientists have long recognized the possibility—small, but not zero—that global warming could ignite a “methane bomb” in the Arctic: the rapid release of huge amounts of methane from thawing permafrost and underwater methane hydrates. Such a release could trigger extinction-level warming...."

More at link.


An "..extinction-level warming" is beyond a "disaster."


Responses:
[10934]


10934


Date: August 21, 2018 at 09:02:17
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Global methane levels hitting new highs

URL: http://www.earthboppin.net/talkshop/enviro/messages/15319.html



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