Postglacial response of Arctic Ocean gas hydrates to climatic amelioration
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/13128Date
2017-06-05Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Serov, Pavel; Vadakkepuliyambatta, Sunil; Mienert, Jurgen; Patton, Henry; Portnov, Aleksei D; Silyakova, Anna; Panieri, Giuliana; Carroll, Michael Leslie; Carroll, JoLynn; Andreassen, Karin; Hubbard, Alun LloydAbstract
Seafloor methane release due to the thermal dissociation of gas
hydrates is pervasive across the continental margins of the Arctic
Ocean. Furthermore, there is increasing awareness that shallow
hydrate-related methane seeps have appeared due to enhanced
warming of Arctic Ocean bottom water during the last century.
Although it has been argued that a gas hydrate gun could trigger
abrupt climate change, the processes and rates of subsurface/
atmospheric natural gas exchange remain uncertain. Here we
investigate the dynamics between gas hydrate stability and
environmental changes from the height of the last glaciation
through to the present day. Using geophysical observations from
offshore Svalbard to constrain a coupled ice sheet/gas hydrate
model, we identify distinct phases of subglacial methane sequestration
and subsequent release on ice sheet retreat that led to the
formation of a suite of seafloor domes. Reconstructing the
evolution of this dome field, we find that incursions of warm
Atlantic bottom water forced rapid gas hydrate dissociation and
enhanced methane emissions during the penultimate Heinrich
event, the Bølling and Allerød interstadials, and the Holocene optimum.
Our results highlight the complex interplay between the
cryosphere, geosphere, and atmosphere over the last 30,000 y that
led to extensive changes in subseafloor carbon storage that forced
distinct episodes of methane release due to natural climate variability
well before recent anthropogenic warming.
Description
Source at: http://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1619288114