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Methane Hydrates Not Cause of Past Global Warming

Canadian University Press Releases/Newswire

<== Canadian Campus Newswire

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August 24, 2006

Source: :
http://communications.uvic.ca/releases/release.php?display=release&id=751

Methane Hydrates Not Cause of Past Global Warming

By studying gas bubbles frozen in ancient Greenland ice, University of Victoria researchers have dispelled a popular theory that marine gas hydrates caused a significant release of methane gas into the earth’s atmosphere, triggering in a period of global warming at the end of the last ice age.

"Understanding the behavior of global atmospheric methane is important because it is the third strongest ‘greenhouse gas’ after carbon dioxide and water vapour," says UVic biogeochemist Dr. Michael Whiticar, part of the Canada-US team who conducted the study. "Atmospheric methane concentrations have increased about 250 per cent in the last 250 years, and they continue to rise about one per cent a year."

The team, which included UVic PhD student Hinrich Schaefer, studied the concentration and carbon isotope fingerprints of the methane in the Pakitsoq, Greenland ice. The technique enabled researchers to investigate the changes in sources and sinks of atmospheric methane, perhaps analogous to today’s rapid rise, in the Pleistocene and Holocene ages.

"Methane is a gas that makes a significant contribution to global warming but has gone largely unnoticed by the public and some policy makers," said Schaefer, now pursuing post-graduate studies at Orgeon State University. "Its concentration has more than doubled since the Industrial Revolution, from things like natural gas exploration, landfills, and agriculture. We need to know whether rapid increases of methane in the past have triggered global warming or just been a reaction to it."

According to Whiticar, the study shows that massive destabilization of methane hydrates along the oceanic shelves and the corresponding release of methane to the atmosphere cannot be responsible for "detonating" the rise in greenhouse gases 12,000 years ago. "Our work supports that wetlands and permafrost layers are responsible for the enhanced sources of methane to the atmosphere. This is critical knowledge because again today we see rapid retreating of our northern permafrost boundaries due to Arctic warming."

The findings of the team’s research is featured in an article in this week’s edition of the journal Science. Funding for the Canadian aspects of the work was provided by the Canadian Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric Sciences, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council and Canada Foundation for Innovation with collaborations with Oregon State University, University of Colorado, and the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California-San Diego.

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Media Contacts:
Dr. Michael Whiticar (School of Earth and Ocean Sciences) at (h) (250) 598-8877 or whiticar@uvic.ca (Dr. Whiticar is only available Aug. 24 and 25 or after Sept. 5)
Patty Pitts (UVic Communications Services) at (250) 721-7656 or ppitts@uvic.ca


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