Sunday 27 July 2014

Methane clathrates

Major Methane Releases at Laptev Megaflare Spot



Global Methane Tracking,

23 July, 2014


The SWERUS-C3 (Oden) expedition continues to update methane findings of the past several days. The ship's current location is in the Laptev Sea, searching for methane plumes and rechecking stations visited in past expeditions by Semiletov and Shakhova.



The circled area on the map is the area of the methane emissions addressed below.

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Source: http://oden.geo.su.se/map/
Use Google Chrome for website.

What is being found is surprising and sobering. As Ulf Hedman, Science 
Coordinator, Swedish Polar Research Secretariat reported yesterday, they have 
found at least one "megaflare" of methane release from the Laptev Sea floor into
 the armosphere.

In his words, "We are “sniffing” methane. We see the bubbles on video from the 
camera mounted on the CTD or the Multicorer. All analysis tells the signs. We are 
in a Mega flare. We see it in the water column we read it above the surface an we 
follow it up high into the sky with radars and lasers. We see it mixed in the air and 
carried away with the winds. Methane in the air."
Source: http://polar.se/en/blogg/mega-flare/

Örjan Gustafsson, Stockholm University, commented, "The discovery was made 
while the icebreaker Oden crosscut the Laptev Sea along a depth gradient from 
1000m to just 100m following the continental slope upward to reach the shallow 
waters of the outer Laptev Sea Shelf. By use of acoustic techniques and 
geochemical analyses of water samples, the scientists found vast methane plumes 
escaping from the seafloor at depths between 500 m and 150 m. At several places, 
the methane “bubbles“ even rose to the ocean surface."

Source: http://www.su.se/english/research/leading-research-areas/science/
swerus-c3-first-observations-of-methane-release-from-arctic-ocean-hydrates-1.
198540

Hedman posted this image to illustrate the rise of, and the saturation of methane in 
the ocean at one location which seems to be at about 62 meters in depth. 

























Hedman's comments about this search and discovery were: "Back and forth, back 
and forth. We are now on the way to station 22. Back and forth. 
Indications of flares and the mid-water sonar goes red. We throw everything 
we got in the water and turn on all ship system to maximum for logging data."

So what are the initial findings?

According to Örjan Gustafsson, Stockholm University, "the leaking methane from 
the seafloor of the continental slope may have its origins in collapsing “methane 
hydrates,” clusters of methane trapped in frozen water due to high pressure and 
low temperature."

The methane saturation levels were the big surprise, "results of preliminary 
analyses of seawater samples pointed towards levels of dissolved methane 10-50 
times higher than background levels."

What is causing the seeps to increase?

"Örjan Gustafsson thinks that the mechanism behind the presence of methane 
seeps at these depths may have something to do with the ”tongue” of relatively 
warm Atlantic water, presumably intruding across the Arctic Ocean at 200-600 m 
depths.” Some evidence have shown that this water mass has recently become 
warmer. As this warm Atlantic water, the last remnants of the Gulf Stream, 
propagates eastward along the upper slope of the East Siberian margin, it may 
lead to destabilization of methane hydrates on the upper portion of the slope. This 
may be what we are now seeing for the first time.”

Source: http://www.su.se/english/research/leading-research-areas/science/swerus-
c3-first-observations-of-methane-release-from-arctic-ocean-hydrates-1.198540

That subsurface Atlantic water is accompanied by Laptev Sea surface 
temperatures as high as 6.9 C, as reported by Oden over the last few days.

How large an area of methane release is witnessed by the expedition? Enough 
that it is a significant source emitting from several areas in the megaflare. 

"We mapped out an area of several kilometers where bubbles were filling the 
water column at depths of 200 to 500 m,” writes Örjan Gustafsson. "Additional 
observations include the discovery of over 100 new methane seep sites in the 
shallower waters of the Laptev shelf (at 60-70m depth), a likely consequence 
of the thawing subsea permafrost."

We have gained solid science data on a major methane source that is entering the 
atmosphere form the Laptev, and it will be interesting to observe how many more 
will be found in the coming days. If this is further documented, we are witnessing 
the further degradation of subsea permafrost with real global climate implications.



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