• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Decade-Long Mystery Behind Siberia’s Massive Explosive Craters Finally Revealed

September 30, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Scientists believe they now know what has caused a series of mysterious craters to appear in Siberia over the last decade. It seems that, if conditions are right, a changing climate can have explosive implications.

Advertisement

In 2014, a strange crater appeared on the Yamal Peninsula in Siberia. The sudden appearance of the crater and the material surrounding it suggested it had been produced by some sort of explosion. Since then, scientists and locals have discovered several other craters that have appeared in the landscape.

These are not small potholes; the craters are pretty large. Some of them are up to 50 meters (165 feet) deep. During their investigations, researchers identified unusually high levels of methane around the craters, which suggested the greenhouse gas was being released by the gigantic holes. This led researchers to believe that large amounts of the gas trapped under the Siberian permafrost was escaping as climate change caused local temperatures to rise.

However, further investigation was needed to figure out exactly how these massive holes were forming. According to a new study, the permafrost melting hypothesis was not enough to explain the craters. Instead, the authors believe a series of specific conditions created by the region’s unusual geology and the effects of climate change kickstarted a process the led to methane being released with explosive results.  

“There are very, very specific conditions that allow for this phenomenon to happen,” Ana Morgado, a chemical engineer at the University of Cambridge said in a statement. “We’re talking about a very niche geological space.”

The new explanation offered by Morgado and colleagues posits that surface warming leads to a rapid pressure change deep underground, which eventually causes the powerful release of methane gas. They researched this conclusion by assessing whether the process had been started by a physical or chemical reaction.

Advertisement

“There are only two ways you can get an explosion,” said Julyan Cartwright, a geophysicist at the Spanish National Research Council added. “Either a chemical reaction happens, and you have an explosion, like dynamite blowing up, or you pump up your bicycle tire until it blows up – that’s physics.”

In the case of the Siberian craters, there was no evidence of chemical reactions, which meant it had to be physical. But how?

The analogy offered by the researchers is one related to a pump and a bike tire. If you pump up the tire too much, it will eventually pop. So, it was just a case of figuring out what the pump was, in this instance. The answer was osmosis, the process by which a fluid moves to equalize the concentration of substances dissolved in them.

A 4 stage diagram showing how cracks form and cause the explosions. In the first image, the active layer of soul is seen on top of the permafrost layer with the small layer of cryopeg around two thirds down. In the second image water is seen progressing downwards through the permafrost layer. In the third, large cracks leading to the surface have been added. In the final image, the surface has exploded, throwing up debris.

The processes of melt water leaking into the permafrost and contributing to explosive pressure that eventually erupts at the surface.

Image credit: AGU/Madeline Reinsel

The Yamal Peninsula has thick clay-like permafrost that usually functions as an osmotic barrier, but climate change has altered this.

Advertisement

The permafrost layer, which is 180 to 300 meters (591 to 984 feet) thick sits below a layer of topsoil known as the “active layer”. While the permafrost layer remains constantly frozen, the topsoil layer thaws and refreezes with the seasons.

Within the permafrost in some spots of the peninsula are special layers of unfrozen, high-salinity water called cryopegs. These layers remain in a liquid state due to the pressure and its salinity. And under these cryopegs is a layer of crystallized methane-water solids, known as methane hydrates, which should remain stable due to the low temperatures and high pressure.

However, now that average temperatures have risen, the active layer is melting and expanding downwards until it reaches the cryopeg layer due to osmotic pressure. Because there is not enough space in this layer to hold the extra meltwater, pressure starts to build up. This pressure causes cracks to appear that travel up to the surface, which result in a sudden drop in pressure at depth. That sudden pressure change damages the methane hydrate below the cryopegs, resulting in the release of methane gas and – like the bike tire becoming too full – a physical explosion.

The researchers conclude that the process leading up these explosions can take decades to occur, which fits with increasing climate warming since the 1980s.

Advertisement

“This might be a very infrequently occurring phenomenon,” Morgado said. “But the amount of methane that’s being released could have quite a big impact on global warming.”

The study is published in Geophysical Research Letters. 

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Cricket-Manchester test likely to be postponed after India COVID-19 case
  2. EU to attend U.S. trade meeting put in doubt by French anger
  3. Soccer-West Ham win again, Leicester and Napoli falter
  4. Was Jesus A Hallucinogenic Mushroom? One Scholar Certainly Thought So

Source Link: Decade-Long Mystery Behind Siberia's Massive Explosive Craters Finally Revealed

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • After Three Years Of Searching, NASA Realized It Recorded Over The Apollo 11 Moon Landing Footage
  • Professor Of Astronomy Explains Why You Can’t Fire Your Enemies Straight Into The Sun
  • Do We All See The Same Blue? Brilliant Quiz Shows The Subjective Nature Of Color Perception
  • Earliest Detailed Observations Of A Star Exploding Show True Shape Of A Supernova
  • Balloon-Mounted Telescope Captures Most Precise Observations Of First Known Black Hole Yet
  • “Dawn Of A New Era”: A US Nuclear Company Becomes First Ever Startup To Achieve Cold Criticality
  • Meet The Kodkod Of The Americas: Shy, Secretive, And Super-Small
  • Incredible Footage May Be First Evidence Wild Wolves Have Figured Out How To Use Tools
  • Raccoons In US Cities Are Evolving To Become More Pet-Like
  • How Does CERN’s Antimatter Factory Work? We Visited To Find Out
  • Elusive Gingko-Toothed Beaked Whale Seen Alive For First Time Ever
  • Candidate Gravitational Wave Detection Hints At First-Of-Its-Kind Incredibly Small Object
  • People Are Just Learning What A Baby Eel Is Called
  • First-Ever Look At Neanderthal Nasal Cavity Shatters Expectations
  • Traces Of Photosynthetic Lifeforms 1 Billion Years Older Than Previous Record-Holder Discovered
  • This 12,000-Year-Old Artwork Shows An “Extraordinary” Moment In History And Human Creativity
  • World’s First Critically Endangered Penguin Directly Competes With Fishing Boats For Food
  • Parasitic Ant Queens Use Chemical Warfare To Incite Revolutions Against Reigning Queens
  • Data From Mars Lets ESA Predict 3I/ATLAS’s Path 10 Times More Precisely
  • A Massive Gold Deposit Worth $192 Billion Has Been Discovered As Prices Stay Sky High For 2025
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version