Zombie greenhouse gas lurks in the permafrost under the Arctic Ocean

Millions of tons of organic carbon and methane under the Arctic Ocean thaw and seep to the surface every year. And climate change could accelerate this release of greenhouse gases, new research suggests.

The carbon bound in organic matter and methane (a carbon atom bound to four hydrogen atoms) is currently trapped in submarine permafrost, which is frozen sediment that was covered by 120 meters of seawater for about 1800 by the end of the Paleolithic Ice Age. up to 1400 years ago, according to the US Geological Survey (USGS). Most undersea permafrost resides on the continental shelf beneath the Arctic Ocean, said study author Sayedeh Sara Sayedi, a doctoral student in the department of plant and natural sciences at Brigham Young University in Salt Lake City.

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