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Sergey Zimov, director of the Northeast Science Station in Siberia, examines asection of permafrost containing trapped carbon along the Kolyma River. The thawing permafrost is releasing carbon dioxide and methane, two gases that increase global warming, at a rate far higher than thought.
Sergey Zimov, director of the Northeast Science Station in Siberia, examines asection of permafrost containing trapped carbon along the Kolyma River. The thawing permafrost is releasing carbon dioxide and methane, two gases that increase global warming, at a rate far higher than thought.
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Washington – Global-warming gases trapped in the soil are bubbling out of the thawing permafrost in amounts far higher than previously thought and may trigger what researchers warn is a climate time bomb.

Methane – a greenhouse gas 23 times more powerful than carbon dioxide – is being released from the permafrost at a rate five times faster than thought, according to a study being published today in the journal Nature. The findings are based on new, more accurate measuring techniques.

“The effects can be huge,” said lead author Katey Walter of the University of Alaska at Fairbanks. “It’s coming out a lot and there’s a lot more to come out.”

Scientists worry about a global-warming vicious cycle that was not part of their already gloomy climate forecast: Warming already underway thaws permafrost, soil that has been continuously frozen for thousands of years. Thawed permafrost releases methane and carbon dioxide.

Those gases reach the atmosphere and help trap heat on Earth in the greenhouse effect. The trapped heat thaws more permafrost and so on.

“The higher the temperature gets, the more permafrost we melt, the more tendency it is to become a more vicious cycle,” said Chris Field, director of global ecology at the Carnegie Institution of Washington, who was not part of the study. “That’s the thing that is scary about this whole thing. There are lots of mechanisms that tend to be self-perpetuating and relatively few that tend to shut it off.”

Most of the methane-releasing permafrost is in Siberia. Another study earlier this summer in the journal Science found that the amount of carbon trapped in this type of permafrost – called yedoma – is much more prevalent than originally thought and may be 100 times the amount of carbon released into the air each year by the burning of fossil fuels.

Carbon beneath dry permafrost is released as carbon dioxide.

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