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Scientific personnel
T. E. Osterkamp, N.N. Romanovskii (Moscow State University), V.
E. Romanovsky, G. S. Tipenko, S. I. Pokrovsky
This material is based upon work supported by the
National Science Foundation under Grant OPP-9732126. Any opinions,
findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in the material
are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views
of the National Science Foundation.
Methane hydrates occur wherever methane and water exist in close
proximity at low temperatures and elevated pressures; conditions
that are present in permafrost regions and beneath the sea along
the outer continental margins. Consequently, methane hydrates are
thought to be widespread in both onshore permafrost regions of the
North American and Russian Arctic and in the shallow continental
shelves of the Arctic Ocean, where subsea permafrost is found. Methane
gas may be released to the atmosphere because of hydrate destabilization
as a result of climatic warming and changes in sea level. Current
models of climate predict a climatic warming and permafrost temperatures
are known to have increased 2 - 4 °C during this century. With
present knowledge, it is not possible to predict the amount of methane
that is currently being released and that will be released by gas
hydrate decomposition as a result of permafrost, especially subsea
permafrost, degradation.
We propose a research effort that will involve a
survey of existing data on gas hydrate and permafrost conditions
in the Russian Arctic land-shelf system to establish boundary conditions,
properties, occurrence and distribution to use as input data for
a two-dimensional numerical model of gas hydrates and permafrost.
This model was developed by us in the late 1980s and modified in
the early 1990s specifically for studies of permafrost, subsea permafrost
and gas hydrates over long time scales. The proposed research is
a continuation of and builds on this previous research. The model
will be applied to several sites in North America and Russia to
evaluate permafrost degradation in response to changes in climate
and sea level and the potential for gas hydrate production. The
information generated by the model will be useful for making improved
estimates of the possible fluxes of methane into the atmosphere
as a result of permafrost degradation and gas hydrate decomposition.
The research will be conducted jointly by Geophysical
Institute and Russian investigators.
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