4.5 Article

Methane oxidation following submarine permafrost degradation: Measurements from a central Laptev Sea shelf borehole

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-BIOGEOSCIENCES
Volume 120, Issue 5, Pages 965-978

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2014JG002862

Keywords

methane; submarine permafrost; Siberian shelf

Funding

  1. German Helmholtz Joint Russian-German research group [HGFJRG 100]

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Submarine permafrost degradation has been invoked as a cause for recent observations of methane emissions from the seabed to the water column and atmosphere of the East Siberian shelf. Sediment drilled 52m down from the sea ice in Buor Khaya Bay, central Laptev Sea revealed unfrozen sediment overlying ice-bonded permafrost. Methane concentrations in the overlying unfrozen sediment were low (mean 20 mu M) but higher in the underlying ice-bonded submarine permafrost (mean 380 mu M). In contrast, sulfate concentrations were substantially higher in the unfrozen sediment (mean 2.5mM) than in the underlying submarine permafrost (mean 0.1mM). Using deduced permafrost degradation rates, we calculate potential mean methane efflux from degrading permafrost of 120mgm(-2) yr(-1) at this site. However, a drop of methane concentrations from 190 mu M to 19 mu M and a concomitant increase of methane C-13 from -63 to -35 directly above the ice-bonded permafrost suggest that methane is effectively oxidized within the overlying unfrozen sediment before it reaches the water column. High rates of methane ebullition into the water column observed elsewhere are thus unlikely to have ice-bonded permafrost as their source.

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