Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Military Space News .




SHAKE AND BLOW
Earthquakes trigger undersea methane reservoirs: study
by Staff Writers
Paris, France (AFP) July 28, 2013


Earthquakes can rip open sub-sea pockets of methane, a highly potent greenhouse gas, according to a study by German and Swiss scientists published on Sunday.

Quake-caused methane should be added to the list of heat-trapping carbon emissions that affect the world's climate system, although the scale of this contribution remains unclear, they said.

The evidence comes from cores of sediment drilled from the bed of the northern Arabian Sea during a research trip by marine scientists in 2007.

One of the cores has now been found to contain methane hydrates -- a solid ice-like crystalline structure of methane and water -- only 1.6 metres (5.2 feet) below the sea floor.

Also uncovered were telltale signatures from water between sediment grains, and concentrations of a mineral called barite.

Together, these suggested that methane had surged up through the sea bed in recent decades.

"We started going through the literature and found that a major earthquake had occurred close by, in 1945," said David Fischer from the MARUM Institute at the University of Bremen.

"Based on several indicators, we postulated that the earthquake led to a fracturing of the sediments, releasing the gas that had been trapped below the hydrates into the ocean."

Their search names the culprit as an 8.1-magnitude quake, the biggest ever detected in the northern Arabian Sea.

It ruptured a shallow gas reservoir at a location called Nascent Ridge, according to their paper, appearing in the journal Nature Geoscience.

Over a likely period of decades, around 7.4 million cubic metres (261 million cubic feet) of methane -- equivalent roughly to 10 large natural-gas tankers -- belched to the surface, the authors calculate.

This estimate is conservative, they stress, adding that there could well be other sites in the area that were breached by the quake.

Greenhouse gases have both natural and man-made sources.

Identified natural sources include volcanic eruptions, which disgorge heat-trapping carbon dioxide (CO2) as well as cooling sulphur dioxide particles, and methane from land and thawing permafrost.

The biggest human source is CO2, from the burning of coal, gas and oil, and methane caused by deforestation and agriculture.

Methane has become a rising concern in the global warming equation because it is 25 times more effective than CO2 in trapping solar heat, although it is also shorter-lived.

According to estimates published last week in Nature, the leakage of 50 billion tonnes of methane from the thawing shoreline of the East Siberian Sea -- part of the Arctic Ocean, which is one of the Earth's hot spots for warming -- would inflict costs almost as big as the world's entire economic output.

.


Related Links
Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters
When the Earth Quakes
A world of storm and tempest






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








SHAKE AND BLOW
Devastating long-distance impact of earthquakes
Bonn, Germany (SPX) Jul 29, 2013
In 2006 the island of Java, Indonesia was struck by a devastating earthquake followed by the onset of a mud eruption to the east, flooding villages over several square kilometers and that continues to erupt today. Until now, researchers believed the earthquake was too far from the mud volcano to trigger the eruption. Geophysicists at the University of Bonn, Germany and ETH Zurich, Switzerl ... read more


SHAKE AND BLOW
Rafael gears up for Israel's new defense era

Early hardware delivery enables deployment of crucial missile defense radar

Israel deploys Iron Dome near Red Sea resort of Eilat

Missile plan to go ahead despite test failure: US

SHAKE AND BLOW
Raytheon demonstrates high-definition, two-color Third Generation FLIR System

Raytheon, Chemring Group plan live missile firing for next phase of CENTURION development

Panama says suspected missile material found on N. Korea ship

Lockheed Martin Completes Captive Carry Tests with LRASM

SHAKE AND BLOW
First Upgraded MQ-8C Fire Scout Delivered to U.S. Navy

US drone strike kills two militants in Pakistan

Northrop Grumman, U.S. Navy Complete First Arrested Landing of a Tailless Unmanned Aircraft Aboard an Aircraft Carrier

US drone lands on carrier deck in historic flight

SHAKE AND BLOW
New Military Communications Satellite Built By Lockheed Martin Launches

US Navy Poised to Launch Lockheed Martin-Built Secure Communications Satellite for Mobile Users

Northrop Grumman Moves New B-2 Satellite Communications Concept to the High Ground

Canada links up on secure U.S. military telecoms network

SHAKE AND BLOW
Novel Hollow-Core Optical Fiber to Enable High-Power Military Sensors

US jets drop unarmed bombs on Australia's Great Barrier Reef

Northrop Grumman Awarded Contract for LITENING Targeting System Sustainment

Raytheon's advanced uncooled thermal technology preferred by international land forces

SHAKE AND BLOW
Singapore, Brazil firms eye Latin American defense market

Canada issues RFP for vehicles; Oshkosh eyes contract

Iraq seeks FMS deals worth more than $1.9B

Rheinmetall, MAN announce military deal in Australia

SHAKE AND BLOW
Japan's Abe vows to help Philippines amid China row

China rules out leaders' summit with Japan: state media

JFK's sole survivor named ambassador to Japan

China coastguard raises Japan island row temperature

SHAKE AND BLOW
New NIST nanoscale indenter takes novel approach to measuring surface properties

Desktop printing at the nano level

New nanoscale imaging method finds application in plasmonics

York Nanocentre researchers image individual atoms in a living catalytic reaction




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement