Back home   |   Bookmark   |   Start page   |   Site map    
Services
News
Channels
Home & Family
Leisure
Technology
Business
Science
Site Search
Free email




Study reveals lakes a major source of prehistoric methane

TheAllINeed.com
(NC&T/UAF) Methane bubbling from arctic lakes could have been responsible for up to 87 percent of that methane spike, said UAF researcher Katey Walter, lead author of a report printed in the Oct. 26 issue of Science magazine. The findings could help scientists understand how current warming might affect atmospheric levels of methane, a gas that is thought to contribute to climate change.

"It tells us that this isn't just something that is ongoing now. It would have been a positive feedback to climate warming then, as it is today," said Walter. "We estimate that as much as 10 times the amount of methane that is currently in the atmosphere will come out of these lakes as permafrost thaws in the future. The timing of this emission is uncertain, but likely we are talking about a time frame of hundreds to thousands of years, if climate warming continues as projected."

Ice cores from Greenland and Antarctica have shown that during the early Holocene Period--about 14,000 to 11,500 years ago--the levels of methane in the atmosphere rose significantly, Walter said. "They found that an unidentified northern source (of methane) appeared during that time."

Previous hypotheses suggested that the increase came from gas hydrates or wetlands. This study's findings indicate that methane bubbling from thermokarst lakes, which are formed when permafrost thaws rapidly, is likely a third and major source.

Walter's research focused on areas of Siberia and Alaska that, during the last ice age, were dry grasslands atop ice-rich permafrost. As the climate warmed, Walter said, that permafrost thawed, forming thermokarst lakes.

Graduate students Sudipta Sarkar, center, and Laura Brosius, left, and researcher Katey Walter pose near a large pocket of methane frozen in the ice of a thermokarst lake in Interior Alaska in October 2007. (Photo: Dragos Vas)
"Lakes really flared up on this icy permafrost landscape, emitting huge amounts of methane," she said.

As the permafrost around and under the lakes thaws, the organic material in it--dead plants and animals--can enter the lake bottom and become food for the bacteria that produce methane.

"All that carbon that had been locked up in the ground for thousands of years is converted to potent greenhouse gases: methane and carbon dioxide," Walter said. Walter's paper hypothesizes that methane from the lakes contributed 33 to 87 percent of the early Holocene methane increase.

To arrive at the hypothesis, Walter and her colleagues traveled to Siberia and northern Alaska to examine lakes that currently release methane. In addition, they gathered samples of permafrost and thawed them in the laboratory to study how much methane permafrost soil can produce immediately after thawing.

"We found that it produced a lot very quickly," she said.

Finally, she and other researchers studied when existing lakes and lakes in the past formed and found that their formation coincided with the early Holocene Period northern methane spike.

"We came up with a new hypothesis," she said. "Thermokarst lake formation is a source of atmospheric methane today, but it was even more important during early Holocene warming. This suggests that large releases from lakes may occur again in the future with global warming."


About the Author
©2006 All rights reserved

More articles
Meteor in great extinction
Global warming
Population of iberian lynx
Meteor and extinction
Agricultural soil erosion
Research sheds
Prehistoric methane
Rise in atmospheric CO2
'Fossil earthquakes,'
Earth's dynamic interior
Staph-killing properties
Dead clams tell tales
Dinosaur deaths outsourced to India?
Fluorescence in key marine creature
Carbon dioxide
Yellowstone rising
Drinking water
Uncertainty and climate change
Autumn leaves turn red?
Breathable atmosphere
Quotes
Good Night, Good night! Parting is such sweet sorrow, that I shall say good night till it be morrow.-William Shakespeare

Giving is the highest expression of our power. - Vivian Greene

Go down to the machine room and tell them to empty the bit bucket,and FAST, before this baby overflows. -- Adrian Colley


Writers
If you are a writer and want to see your article published at Theallineed.com, just click here to submit.

Info
Today...
In the news...
Food prices remain high despite higher output
The latest Food Outlook indicates that the food import bill of the Low Income Food Deficit Countries (LIFDCs) is expected to reach US$169 billion in 2008, 40 percent more than in 2007.
Which Operating System do you use?
Windows
Linux
OS2
FreeBSD
Other
 
Things to ponder
Why is it called a "near miss" when you don't hit something?

Did you know...
The white part of your fingernail is called the lunula.

Quote of the day
I have yet to see any problem, however complicated, which, when you looked at it in the right way, did not become still more complicated.
Poul Anderson

Featured article
Brief description of Tourette syndrome
Tourette syndrome (TS) is named for the French doctor Georges Gilles de la Tourette, who first described the condition in 1885. Tourette syndrome is also called Tourette's disorder, Gilles de la Tourette syndrome.

 
© 2002 - 2007 Lexur