Methane would warm the planet.
Riverside, California - Global warming could release
long-dormant stores of methane gas trapped beneath the Arctic
permafrost, causing an abrupt and catastrophic climate change like one
that occurred 635 million years ago, University of California-Riverside
researchers have determined.
Back then, the sheets of ice that covered Earth started to
collapse, releasing methane gas that warmed the planet and caused the
ice to retreat over a period of 100 to 1,000 years, said Martin
Kennedy, a geology professor in UCR's Department of Earth Sciences.
Kennedy led the research team.
"It was the greatest global-warming event of Earth's history almost certainly," he said.
The findings are published in the latest issue of Nature.
They suggest that methane ice sheets still exist beneath Arctic ice
sheets that are being degraded by rising carbon-dioxide levels in
Earth's atmosphere.
Recent research indicates that the ice sheets are melting
and methane gas is being released at a much higher rate than previously
thought, he said.
"It doesn't make one feel a lot better about the future," Kennedy said.
If a similar phenomenon occurred today, the most noticeable
change would be a rise in sea level, he said. If the Greenland ice
sheet collapsed, the sea level would rise about 20 feet, inundating
major coastal cities. Accompanying drought could lead to crop failures
and widespread famine, he said.