Santa Fe New Mexican

Explosive natural phenomenon forms craters in Siberia

- By Andrew E. Kramer

MOSCOW — A natural phenomenon first observed by scientists just six years ago and now recurring with alarming frequency in Siberia is causing the ground to explode spontaneou­sly and with tremendous force, leaving craters up to 100 feet deep.

When Yevgeny Chuvilin, a Moscow-based geologist with the Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology, arrived this summer at the rim of the latest blast site, called Crater 17, “it left quite an impression,” he said.

The pit plunged into darkness, surrounded by the tableflat, featureles­s tundra. As Chuvilin stood looking in, he said, slabs of dirt and ice occasional­ly peeled off the permafrost of the crater wall and tumbled in.

“It was making noises. It was like something alive,” Chuvilin said.

Scientists have establishe­d that the craters appearing in the far north of western Siberia are caused by subterrane­an gases, and the recent flurry of explosions is possibly related to global warming, Chuvilin said.

Since the first site was found in 2014, Russian geologists have found 16 more on the Yamal and Gydansk peninsulas.

Chuvilin said the conditions causing the explosions, which are still not fully understood, are probably specific to the geology of the area, as similar craters have not appeared elsewhere in Siberia or in permafrost zones in Canada and Alaska that are also affected by global warming.

The explosions occur underneath small hills or hummocks on the tundra where gas from decaying organic matter is trapped undergroun­d.

Contained beneath a layer of ice above and permafrost all around, the gas creates pressure that elevates the overlying soil. The explosions occur when the pressure rises or the ice layer thaws and breaks suddenly.

Where the gas comes from is a matter of debate, said Chuvilin, one of Russia’s leading experts on permafrost, the jumbled layer of soil, ice, prehistori­c plants and the occasional frozen mammoth that covers 67 percent of Russia’s land surface.

“In Russia, we have a lot of experience studying permafrost,” said Chuvilin, who graduated from the Department of Permafrost at Moscow State University, one of the few universiti­es to have such a specialty.

From this icebox of the Arctic, bits or even whole frozen mammoths, musk ox, woolly rhinoceros­es, prehistori­c horses, wolves and other ancient beasts wash out from the banks of rivers. But Chuvilin said he found no animal parts in the debris field of frozen mud that the explosions threw out.

The strata of perpetuall­y frozen soil are usually a few hundred yards deep, but they go down almost a mile in some places in Siberia. Each summer, a portion near the surface, known as the active layer, thaws.

With warmer summers, the active layer is deepening, potentiall­y melting and weakening the ice over the gas deposits.

The gases causing the explosions, said Chuvilin, may have built up to their current pressure tens or hundreds of thousands of years ago as the organic components of the permafrost partially decayed before freezing.

Another possibilit­y is that methane trapped in deeper layers of the permafrost in a crystallin­e, ice-like form known as methane hydrates is reverting to its gaseous state, possibly because of effects of global warming. In this theory, rising pressure rather than thawing on the surface is causing the gas pockets to burst.

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