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Barents Sea warming 7 times faster than the global average.
Aug 14, 2022 10:48:34   #
Gatsby
 
The study, published in the journal Communications Earth and Environment, analyzed temperature trends in the Arctic Circle between 1979 and 2021 — the modern era of satellite data. They found the rate of warming is particularly high in the Eurasian region of the Arctic, especially the Barents Sea, which has warmed seven times faster than the global average.
Recent data revealed that the annual average temperature in the Barents region climbed by as much as 2.7 degrees Celsius (4.9 degrees Fahrenheit) each decade in the past 20 to 40 years, making the Barents Sea and its islands the fastest warming location on the planet.

https://www.cnn.com/2022/08/11/us/arctic-rapid-warming-climate/index.html

Arctic volcanos
07 November 2018
Ice and flames: Those mysterious Arctic volcanos
The Arctic is usually associated with eternal silence, permafrost and infinite snow-covered flat expanses. In reality, its diverse landscape includes deserts, rivers, hills, mountains and even volcanos. Although relatively scarce, volcanos are truly unique.

The vast Arctic region covers an estimated 27 million square kilometers and includes five active volcanos. Research expeditions from various countries have uncovered much about these volcanic systems, but they hold many more secrets that are yet to be found.

Haakon Mosby, an underwater mud volcano, on the bottom of the Barents Sea between the Norwegian coast and Medvezhy Island, is the most unusual of them. It was discovered in 1995 by members of a Norwegian-US expedition aboard the ship Haakon Mosby and was named after it. Located at a depth of 1,250 meters, the volcano is about 1,500 meters in diameter. It mostly spews mud and gases, with methane accounting for over 99 percent of the emissions. This volcano's eruptions typically last several days, accompanied by earthquakes and rumbling underground sounds. Although mud volcanoes are much weaker than their fire-breathing counterparts, they, too, can inflict damage when letting loose.

The world's northernmost active volcano is also in the Arctic, on the northeastern tip of Jan Mayen Island between the Norwegian and Greenland seas. It towers 2,085 meters above the sea and is a typical stratovolcano. Stratovolcano family volcanos have tell-tale conic profiles and that consist of several hardened lava and volcanic ash layers, that are covered with glaciers. The volcano was considered dormant for a long time until it erupted in 1970. Its last eruption was recorded in 1985. The volcano is named Beerenberg meaning Bear Mountain in Dutch because polar bears were sighted on the slopes in the late 17th century. They continue to roam the area, with volcanic smoke and soot scaring them off from time to time.

The Arctic zone also has three underwater ridges with explosive tempers.

One of them, Kolbeinsey Ridge, is located in Iceland, about 100 kilometers from Kolbeinsey Island which is also part of the ridge. This mountain system remains active. For example, Kolbeinsey Island was 700 meters long in 1616. By 1985, it had shrunk to 42 meters in length and stood five meters high. The island might completely submerge by the end of the 21st century. The first evidence of volcanic activity dates to 1372. Another eruption was recorded in 1755, and the latest officially recorded eruption took place in 1999, although local residents claim that small earthquakes measuring up to three points on the Richter Scale are common here.

The Lomonosov Ridge, another underwater Arctic mountain range, stretches for 1,800 kilometers between Ellesmere Island in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and the New Siberian Islands. Discovered by the Soviet high-latitude expeditions in 1948, the ridge is 60-200 kilometers wide and towers 3,300-3,700 meters above the sea-bed. The depths beneath the ridge are near 954 meters. During research expeditions, scientists managed to locate volcanic glass crystals (quick-hardening lava fragments) at the foot of the ridge. This proves the existence of an active volcano.

Researchers are particularly fascinated with Gakkel Ridge, named in honor of famous oceanographer Yakov Gakkel who discovered it and who also compiled the first bathymetric map of the Arctic. Located between the eastern tip of Greenland and the Laptev Sea, this mountain system features nearly parallel ranges and many mountains consisting of volcanic rock.

In 1999, a series of powerful underground tremors was recorded near the mountain range for the first time. Two years later, the first expeditions left for the tentative quake epicenter. At that time, scientists could only prove the existence of submarine volcanos, while also recording new quakes. In 2007, members of the third expedition discovered various traces of volcanic activity over an area of almost ten square kilometers. What surprised scientists most was that the eruption took place four kilometers beneath the waves, whereas similar eruptions are usually recorded not more than three kilometers down.

Scientists suggest a huge chamber filled with carbon dioxide formed over the lava "lake" beneath the seabed. The lava contained ten times more gas than previously observed eruptions in underwater mountain ranges. The gas eventually left the red-hot magma layer and filled the chamber. In 1999, a series of earthquakes tore the chamber apart, sending gas and magma to the surface and littering the vicinity with fragments of the chamber's "roof." According to experts, the chamber was several kilometers beneath the seabed; and gas-and-lava fountains apparently reached an altitude of at least 2,000 meters above the seabed.

Scientists have collected a lot of data about the Arctic Ocean's deep-sea volcanos using state-of-the-art technology. Traditionally, it was impossible to study huge mountain ranges hiding beneath sea-ice formations. Today, new robotic technologies allow scientists to analyze underwater surface features and to monitor specific volcanic eruptions on a regular basis.

Arctic volcanos
07 November 2018
Ice and flames: Those mysterious Arctic volcanos
The Arctic is usually associated with eternal silence, permafrost and infinite snow-covered flat expanses. In reality, its diverse landscape includes deserts, rivers, hills, mountains and even volcanos. Although relatively scarce, volcanos are truly unique.

The vast Arctic region covers an estimated 27 million square kilometers and includes five active volcanos. Research expeditions from various countries have uncovered much about these volcanic systems, but they hold many more secrets that are yet to be found.

Haakon Mosby, an underwater mud volcano, on the bottom of the Barents Sea between the Norwegian coast and Medvezhy Island, is the most unusual of them. It was discovered in 1995 by members of a Norwegian-US expedition aboard the ship Haakon Mosby and was named after it. Located at a depth of 1,250 meters, the volcano is about 1,500 meters in diameter. It mostly spews mud and gases, with methane accounting for over 99 percent of the emissions. This volcano's eruptions typically last several days, accompanied by earthquakes and rumbling underground sounds. Although mud volcanoes are much weaker than their fire-breathing counterparts, they, too, can inflict damage when letting loose.

The world's northernmost active volcano is also in the Arctic, on the northeastern tip of Jan Mayen Island between the Norwegian and Greenland seas. It towers 2,085 meters above the sea and is a typical stratovolcano. Stratovolcano family volcanos have tell-tale conic profiles and that consist of several hardened lava and volcanic ash layers, that are covered with glaciers. The volcano was considered dormant for a long time until it erupted in 1970. Its last eruption was recorded in 1985. The volcano is named Beerenberg meaning Bear Mountain in Dutch because polar bears were sighted on the slopes in the late 17th century. They continue to roam the area, with volcanic smoke and soot scaring them off from time to time.

The Arctic zone also has three underwater ridges with explosive tempers.

One of them, Kolbeinsey Ridge, is located in Iceland, about 100 kilometers from Kolbeinsey Island which is also part of the ridge. This mountain system remains active. For example, Kolbeinsey Island was 700 meters long in 1616. By 1985, it had shrunk to 42 meters in length and stood five meters high. The island might completely submerge by the end of the 21st century. The first evidence of volcanic activity dates to 1372. Another eruption was recorded in 1755, and the latest officially recorded eruption took place in 1999, although local residents claim that small earthquakes measuring up to three points on the Richter Scale are common here.

The Lomonosov Ridge, another underwater Arctic mountain range, stretches for 1,800 kilometers between Ellesmere Island in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and the New Siberian Islands. Discovered by the Soviet high-latitude expeditions in 1948, the ridge is 60-200 kilometers wide and towers 3,300-3,700 meters above the sea-bed. The depths beneath the ridge are near 954 meters. During research expeditions, scientists managed to locate volcanic glass crystals (quick-hardening lava fragments) at the foot of the ridge. This proves the existence of an active volcano.

Researchers are particularly fascinated with Gakkel Ridge, named in honor of famous oceanographer Yakov Gakkel who discovered it and who also compiled the first bathymetric map of the Arctic. Located between the eastern tip of Greenland and the Laptev Sea, this mountain system features nearly parallel ranges and many mountains consisting of volcanic rock.

In 1999, a series of powerful underground tremors was recorded near the mountain range for the first time. Two years later, the first expeditions left for the tentative quake epicenter. At that time, scientists could only prove the existence of submarine volcanos, while also recording new quakes. In 2007, members of the third expedition discovered various traces of volcanic activity over an area of almost ten square kilometers. What surprised scientists most was that the eruption took place four kilometers beneath the waves, whereas similar eruptions are usually recorded not more than three kilometers down.

Scientists suggest a huge chamber filled with carbon dioxide formed over the lava "lake" beneath the seabed. The lava contained ten times more gas than previously observed eruptions in underwater mountain ranges. The gas eventually left the red-hot magma layer and filled the chamber. In 1999, a series of earthquakes tore the chamber apart, sending gas and magma to the surface and littering the vicinity with fragments of the chamber's "roof." According to experts, the chamber was several kilometers beneath the seabed; and gas-and-lava fountains apparently reached an altitude of at least 2,000 meters above the seabed.

Scientists have collected a lot of data about the Arctic Ocean's deep-sea volcanos using state-of-the-art technology. Traditionally, it was impossible to study huge mountain ranges hiding beneath sea-ice formations. Today, new robotic technologies allow scientists to analyze underwater surface features and to monitor specific volcanic eruptions on a regular basis.

https://arctic.ru/analitic/20181107/801083.html

Now, as for those methane emissions:

For decades, efforts to mitigate c*****e c****e have been centred on reducing carbon dioxide (CO₂) emissions. However, the latest report by the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on C*****e C****e (IPCC) has called attention to the role of another gas in g****l w*****g: methane.

Methane is one of the biggest contributors to g****l w*****g, second only to CO₂. The IPCC suggests that this gas is responsible for between 30 % and 50 % of the temperature increase.

In 2019, methane in the atmosphere reached record levels — around two and a half times more than those of the pre-industrial era. Some of the scientific community's data is worrisome, since methane is one of the most potent gases in terms of the surge in global temperature.

https://www.activesustainability.com/c*****e-c****e/methane-greenhouse-gas/

Reply
Aug 14, 2022 10:50:20   #
Smedley_buzkill
 
Gatsby wrote:
The study, published in the journal Communications Earth and Environment, analyzed temperature trends in the Arctic Circle between 1979 and 2021 — the modern era of satellite data. They found the rate of warming is particularly high in the Eurasian region of the Arctic, especially the Barents Sea, which has warmed seven times faster than the global average.
Recent data revealed that the annual average temperature in the Barents region climbed by as much as 2.7 degrees Celsius (4.9 degrees Fahrenheit) each decade in the past 20 to 40 years, making the Barents Sea and its islands the fastest warming location on the planet.

https://www.cnn.com/2022/08/11/us/arctic-rapid-warming-climate/index.html

Arctic volcanos
07 November 2018
Ice and flames: Those mysterious Arctic volcanos
The Arctic is usually associated with eternal silence, permafrost and infinite snow-covered flat expanses. In reality, its diverse landscape includes deserts, rivers, hills, mountains and even volcanos. Although relatively scarce, volcanos are truly unique.

The vast Arctic region covers an estimated 27 million square kilometers and includes five active volcanos. Research expeditions from various countries have uncovered much about these volcanic systems, but they hold many more secrets that are yet to be found.

Haakon Mosby, an underwater mud volcano, on the bottom of the Barents Sea between the Norwegian coast and Medvezhy Island, is the most unusual of them. It was discovered in 1995 by members of a Norwegian-US expedition aboard the ship Haakon Mosby and was named after it. Located at a depth of 1,250 meters, the volcano is about 1,500 meters in diameter. It mostly spews mud and gases, with methane accounting for over 99 percent of the emissions. This volcano's eruptions typically last several days, accompanied by earthquakes and rumbling underground sounds. Although mud volcanoes are much weaker than their fire-breathing counterparts, they, too, can inflict damage when letting loose.

The world's northernmost active volcano is also in the Arctic, on the northeastern tip of Jan Mayen Island between the Norwegian and Greenland seas. It towers 2,085 meters above the sea and is a typical stratovolcano. Stratovolcano family volcanos have tell-tale conic profiles and that consist of several hardened lava and volcanic ash layers, that are covered with glaciers. The volcano was considered dormant for a long time until it erupted in 1970. Its last eruption was recorded in 1985. The volcano is named Beerenberg meaning Bear Mountain in Dutch because polar bears were sighted on the slopes in the late 17th century. They continue to roam the area, with volcanic smoke and soot scaring them off from time to time.

The Arctic zone also has three underwater ridges with explosive tempers.

One of them, Kolbeinsey Ridge, is located in Iceland, about 100 kilometers from Kolbeinsey Island which is also part of the ridge. This mountain system remains active. For example, Kolbeinsey Island was 700 meters long in 1616. By 1985, it had shrunk to 42 meters in length and stood five meters high. The island might completely submerge by the end of the 21st century. The first evidence of volcanic activity dates to 1372. Another eruption was recorded in 1755, and the latest officially recorded eruption took place in 1999, although local residents claim that small earthquakes measuring up to three points on the Richter Scale are common here.

The Lomonosov Ridge, another underwater Arctic mountain range, stretches for 1,800 kilometers between Ellesmere Island in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and the New Siberian Islands. Discovered by the Soviet high-latitude expeditions in 1948, the ridge is 60-200 kilometers wide and towers 3,300-3,700 meters above the sea-bed. The depths beneath the ridge are near 954 meters. During research expeditions, scientists managed to locate volcanic glass crystals (quick-hardening lava fragments) at the foot of the ridge. This proves the existence of an active volcano.

Researchers are particularly fascinated with Gakkel Ridge, named in honor of famous oceanographer Yakov Gakkel who discovered it and who also compiled the first bathymetric map of the Arctic. Located between the eastern tip of Greenland and the Laptev Sea, this mountain system features nearly parallel ranges and many mountains consisting of volcanic rock.

In 1999, a series of powerful underground tremors was recorded near the mountain range for the first time. Two years later, the first expeditions left for the tentative quake epicenter. At that time, scientists could only prove the existence of submarine volcanos, while also recording new quakes. In 2007, members of the third expedition discovered various traces of volcanic activity over an area of almost ten square kilometers. What surprised scientists most was that the eruption took place four kilometers beneath the waves, whereas similar eruptions are usually recorded not more than three kilometers down.

Scientists suggest a huge chamber filled with carbon dioxide formed over the lava "lake" beneath the seabed. The lava contained ten times more gas than previously observed eruptions in underwater mountain ranges. The gas eventually left the red-hot magma layer and filled the chamber. In 1999, a series of earthquakes tore the chamber apart, sending gas and magma to the surface and littering the vicinity with fragments of the chamber's "roof." According to experts, the chamber was several kilometers beneath the seabed; and gas-and-lava fountains apparently reached an altitude of at least 2,000 meters above the seabed.

Scientists have collected a lot of data about the Arctic Ocean's deep-sea volcanos using state-of-the-art technology. Traditionally, it was impossible to study huge mountain ranges hiding beneath sea-ice formations. Today, new robotic technologies allow scientists to analyze underwater surface features and to monitor specific volcanic eruptions on a regular basis.

Arctic volcanos
07 November 2018
Ice and flames: Those mysterious Arctic volcanos
The Arctic is usually associated with eternal silence, permafrost and infinite snow-covered flat expanses. In reality, its diverse landscape includes deserts, rivers, hills, mountains and even volcanos. Although relatively scarce, volcanos are truly unique.

The vast Arctic region covers an estimated 27 million square kilometers and includes five active volcanos. Research expeditions from various countries have uncovered much about these volcanic systems, but they hold many more secrets that are yet to be found.

Haakon Mosby, an underwater mud volcano, on the bottom of the Barents Sea between the Norwegian coast and Medvezhy Island, is the most unusual of them. It was discovered in 1995 by members of a Norwegian-US expedition aboard the ship Haakon Mosby and was named after it. Located at a depth of 1,250 meters, the volcano is about 1,500 meters in diameter. It mostly spews mud and gases, with methane accounting for over 99 percent of the emissions. This volcano's eruptions typically last several days, accompanied by earthquakes and rumbling underground sounds. Although mud volcanoes are much weaker than their fire-breathing counterparts, they, too, can inflict damage when letting loose.

The world's northernmost active volcano is also in the Arctic, on the northeastern tip of Jan Mayen Island between the Norwegian and Greenland seas. It towers 2,085 meters above the sea and is a typical stratovolcano. Stratovolcano family volcanos have tell-tale conic profiles and that consist of several hardened lava and volcanic ash layers, that are covered with glaciers. The volcano was considered dormant for a long time until it erupted in 1970. Its last eruption was recorded in 1985. The volcano is named Beerenberg meaning Bear Mountain in Dutch because polar bears were sighted on the slopes in the late 17th century. They continue to roam the area, with volcanic smoke and soot scaring them off from time to time.

The Arctic zone also has three underwater ridges with explosive tempers.

One of them, Kolbeinsey Ridge, is located in Iceland, about 100 kilometers from Kolbeinsey Island which is also part of the ridge. This mountain system remains active. For example, Kolbeinsey Island was 700 meters long in 1616. By 1985, it had shrunk to 42 meters in length and stood five meters high. The island might completely submerge by the end of the 21st century. The first evidence of volcanic activity dates to 1372. Another eruption was recorded in 1755, and the latest officially recorded eruption took place in 1999, although local residents claim that small earthquakes measuring up to three points on the Richter Scale are common here.

The Lomonosov Ridge, another underwater Arctic mountain range, stretches for 1,800 kilometers between Ellesmere Island in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and the New Siberian Islands. Discovered by the Soviet high-latitude expeditions in 1948, the ridge is 60-200 kilometers wide and towers 3,300-3,700 meters above the sea-bed. The depths beneath the ridge are near 954 meters. During research expeditions, scientists managed to locate volcanic glass crystals (quick-hardening lava fragments) at the foot of the ridge. This proves the existence of an active volcano.

Researchers are particularly fascinated with Gakkel Ridge, named in honor of famous oceanographer Yakov Gakkel who discovered it and who also compiled the first bathymetric map of the Arctic. Located between the eastern tip of Greenland and the Laptev Sea, this mountain system features nearly parallel ranges and many mountains consisting of volcanic rock.

In 1999, a series of powerful underground tremors was recorded near the mountain range for the first time. Two years later, the first expeditions left for the tentative quake epicenter. At that time, scientists could only prove the existence of submarine volcanos, while also recording new quakes. In 2007, members of the third expedition discovered various traces of volcanic activity over an area of almost ten square kilometers. What surprised scientists most was that the eruption took place four kilometers beneath the waves, whereas similar eruptions are usually recorded not more than three kilometers down.

Scientists suggest a huge chamber filled with carbon dioxide formed over the lava "lake" beneath the seabed. The lava contained ten times more gas than previously observed eruptions in underwater mountain ranges. The gas eventually left the red-hot magma layer and filled the chamber. In 1999, a series of earthquakes tore the chamber apart, sending gas and magma to the surface and littering the vicinity with fragments of the chamber's "roof." According to experts, the chamber was several kilometers beneath the seabed; and gas-and-lava fountains apparently reached an altitude of at least 2,000 meters above the seabed.

Scientists have collected a lot of data about the Arctic Ocean's deep-sea volcanos using state-of-the-art technology. Traditionally, it was impossible to study huge mountain ranges hiding beneath sea-ice formations. Today, new robotic technologies allow scientists to analyze underwater surface features and to monitor specific volcanic eruptions on a regular basis.

https://arctic.ru/analitic/20181107/801083.html

Now, as for those methane emissions:

For decades, efforts to mitigate c*****e c****e have been centred on reducing carbon dioxide (CO₂) emissions. However, the latest report by the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on C*****e C****e (IPCC) has called attention to the role of another gas in g****l w*****g: methane.

Methane is one of the biggest contributors to g****l w*****g, second only to CO₂. The IPCC suggests that this gas is responsible for between 30 % and 50 % of the temperature increase.

In 2019, methane in the atmosphere reached record levels — around two and a half times more than those of the pre-industrial era. Some of the scientific community's data is worrisome, since methane is one of the most potent gases in terms of the surge in global temperature.

https://www.activesustainability.com/c*****e-c****e/methane-greenhouse-gas/
The study, published in the journal Communications... (show quote)


See? Somehow Trump has convinced the volcanoes and methane to be w***e s*********ts.

Reply
Aug 14, 2022 10:56:30   #
Gatsby
 
Smedley_buzk**l wrote:
See? Somehow Trump has convinced the volcanoes and methane to be w***e s*********ts.


If Trump can control volcanos, we'd better start being nicer to him.

Reply
 
 
Aug 14, 2022 11:26:39   #
elledee
 
Gatsby wrote:
The study, published in the journal Communications Earth and Environment, analyzed temperature trends in the Arctic Circle between 1979 and 2021 — the modern era of satellite data. They found the rate of warming is particularly high in the Eurasian region of the Arctic, especially the Barents Sea, which has warmed seven times faster than the global average.
Recent data revealed that the annual average temperature in the Barents region climbed by as much as 2.7 degrees Celsius (4.9 degrees Fahrenheit) each decade in the past 20 to 40 years, making the Barents Sea and its islands the fastest warming location on the planet.

https://www.cnn.com/2022/08/11/us/arctic-rapid-warming-climate/index.html

Arctic volcanos
07 November 2018
Ice and flames: Those mysterious Arctic volcanos
The Arctic is usually associated with eternal silence, permafrost and infinite snow-covered flat expanses. In reality, its diverse landscape includes deserts, rivers, hills, mountains and even volcanos. Although relatively scarce, volcanos are truly unique.

The vast Arctic region covers an estimated 27 million square kilometers and includes five active volcanos. Research expeditions from various countries have uncovered much about these volcanic systems, but they hold many more secrets that are yet to be found.

Haakon Mosby, an underwater mud volcano, on the bottom of the Barents Sea between the Norwegian coast and Medvezhy Island, is the most unusual of them. It was discovered in 1995 by members of a Norwegian-US expedition aboard the ship Haakon Mosby and was named after it. Located at a depth of 1,250 meters, the volcano is about 1,500 meters in diameter. It mostly spews mud and gases, with methane accounting for over 99 percent of the emissions. This volcano's eruptions typically last several days, accompanied by earthquakes and rumbling underground sounds. Although mud volcanoes are much weaker than their fire-breathing counterparts, they, too, can inflict damage when letting loose.

The world's northernmost active volcano is also in the Arctic, on the northeastern tip of Jan Mayen Island between the Norwegian and Greenland seas. It towers 2,085 meters above the sea and is a typical stratovolcano. Stratovolcano family volcanos have tell-tale conic profiles and that consist of several hardened lava and volcanic ash layers, that are covered with glaciers. The volcano was considered dormant for a long time until it erupted in 1970. Its last eruption was recorded in 1985. The volcano is named Beerenberg meaning Bear Mountain in Dutch because polar bears were sighted on the slopes in the late 17th century. They continue to roam the area, with volcanic smoke and soot scaring them off from time to time.

The Arctic zone also has three underwater ridges with explosive tempers.

One of them, Kolbeinsey Ridge, is located in Iceland, about 100 kilometers from Kolbeinsey Island which is also part of the ridge. This mountain system remains active. For example, Kolbeinsey Island was 700 meters long in 1616. By 1985, it had shrunk to 42 meters in length and stood five meters high. The island might completely submerge by the end of the 21st century. The first evidence of volcanic activity dates to 1372. Another eruption was recorded in 1755, and the latest officially recorded eruption took place in 1999, although local residents claim that small earthquakes measuring up to three points on the Richter Scale are common here.

The Lomonosov Ridge, another underwater Arctic mountain range, stretches for 1,800 kilometers between Ellesmere Island in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and the New Siberian Islands. Discovered by the Soviet high-latitude expeditions in 1948, the ridge is 60-200 kilometers wide and towers 3,300-3,700 meters above the sea-bed. The depths beneath the ridge are near 954 meters. During research expeditions, scientists managed to locate volcanic glass crystals (quick-hardening lava fragments) at the foot of the ridge. This proves the existence of an active volcano.

Researchers are particularly fascinated with Gakkel Ridge, named in honor of famous oceanographer Yakov Gakkel who discovered it and who also compiled the first bathymetric map of the Arctic. Located between the eastern tip of Greenland and the Laptev Sea, this mountain system features nearly parallel ranges and many mountains consisting of volcanic rock.

In 1999, a series of powerful underground tremors was recorded near the mountain range for the first time. Two years later, the first expeditions left for the tentative quake epicenter. At that time, scientists could only prove the existence of submarine volcanos, while also recording new quakes. In 2007, members of the third expedition discovered various traces of volcanic activity over an area of almost ten square kilometers. What surprised scientists most was that the eruption took place four kilometers beneath the waves, whereas similar eruptions are usually recorded not more than three kilometers down.

Scientists suggest a huge chamber filled with carbon dioxide formed over the lava "lake" beneath the seabed. The lava contained ten times more gas than previously observed eruptions in underwater mountain ranges. The gas eventually left the red-hot magma layer and filled the chamber. In 1999, a series of earthquakes tore the chamber apart, sending gas and magma to the surface and littering the vicinity with fragments of the chamber's "roof." According to experts, the chamber was several kilometers beneath the seabed; and gas-and-lava fountains apparently reached an altitude of at least 2,000 meters above the seabed.

Scientists have collected a lot of data about the Arctic Ocean's deep-sea volcanos using state-of-the-art technology. Traditionally, it was impossible to study huge mountain ranges hiding beneath sea-ice formations. Today, new robotic technologies allow scientists to analyze underwater surface features and to monitor specific volcanic eruptions on a regular basis.

Arctic volcanos
07 November 2018
Ice and flames: Those mysterious Arctic volcanos
The Arctic is usually associated with eternal silence, permafrost and infinite snow-covered flat expanses. In reality, its diverse landscape includes deserts, rivers, hills, mountains and even volcanos. Although relatively scarce, volcanos are truly unique.

The vast Arctic region covers an estimated 27 million square kilometers and includes five active volcanos. Research expeditions from various countries have uncovered much about these volcanic systems, but they hold many more secrets that are yet to be found.

Haakon Mosby, an underwater mud volcano, on the bottom of the Barents Sea between the Norwegian coast and Medvezhy Island, is the most unusual of them. It was discovered in 1995 by members of a Norwegian-US expedition aboard the ship Haakon Mosby and was named after it. Located at a depth of 1,250 meters, the volcano is about 1,500 meters in diameter. It mostly spews mud and gases, with methane accounting for over 99 percent of the emissions. This volcano's eruptions typically last several days, accompanied by earthquakes and rumbling underground sounds. Although mud volcanoes are much weaker than their fire-breathing counterparts, they, too, can inflict damage when letting loose.

The world's northernmost active volcano is also in the Arctic, on the northeastern tip of Jan Mayen Island between the Norwegian and Greenland seas. It towers 2,085 meters above the sea and is a typical stratovolcano. Stratovolcano family volcanos have tell-tale conic profiles and that consist of several hardened lava and volcanic ash layers, that are covered with glaciers. The volcano was considered dormant for a long time until it erupted in 1970. Its last eruption was recorded in 1985. The volcano is named Beerenberg meaning Bear Mountain in Dutch because polar bears were sighted on the slopes in the late 17th century. They continue to roam the area, with volcanic smoke and soot scaring them off from time to time.

The Arctic zone also has three underwater ridges with explosive tempers.

One of them, Kolbeinsey Ridge, is located in Iceland, about 100 kilometers from Kolbeinsey Island which is also part of the ridge. This mountain system remains active. For example, Kolbeinsey Island was 700 meters long in 1616. By 1985, it had shrunk to 42 meters in length and stood five meters high. The island might completely submerge by the end of the 21st century. The first evidence of volcanic activity dates to 1372. Another eruption was recorded in 1755, and the latest officially recorded eruption took place in 1999, although local residents claim that small earthquakes measuring up to three points on the Richter Scale are common here.

The Lomonosov Ridge, another underwater Arctic mountain range, stretches for 1,800 kilometers between Ellesmere Island in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and the New Siberian Islands. Discovered by the Soviet high-latitude expeditions in 1948, the ridge is 60-200 kilometers wide and towers 3,300-3,700 meters above the sea-bed. The depths beneath the ridge are near 954 meters. During research expeditions, scientists managed to locate volcanic glass crystals (quick-hardening lava fragments) at the foot of the ridge. This proves the existence of an active volcano.

Researchers are particularly fascinated with Gakkel Ridge, named in honor of famous oceanographer Yakov Gakkel who discovered it and who also compiled the first bathymetric map of the Arctic. Located between the eastern tip of Greenland and the Laptev Sea, this mountain system features nearly parallel ranges and many mountains consisting of volcanic rock.

In 1999, a series of powerful underground tremors was recorded near the mountain range for the first time. Two years later, the first expeditions left for the tentative quake epicenter. At that time, scientists could only prove the existence of submarine volcanos, while also recording new quakes. In 2007, members of the third expedition discovered various traces of volcanic activity over an area of almost ten square kilometers. What surprised scientists most was that the eruption took place four kilometers beneath the waves, whereas similar eruptions are usually recorded not more than three kilometers down.

Scientists suggest a huge chamber filled with carbon dioxide formed over the lava "lake" beneath the seabed. The lava contained ten times more gas than previously observed eruptions in underwater mountain ranges. The gas eventually left the red-hot magma layer and filled the chamber. In 1999, a series of earthquakes tore the chamber apart, sending gas and magma to the surface and littering the vicinity with fragments of the chamber's "roof." According to experts, the chamber was several kilometers beneath the seabed; and gas-and-lava fountains apparently reached an altitude of at least 2,000 meters above the seabed.

Scientists have collected a lot of data about the Arctic Ocean's deep-sea volcanos using state-of-the-art technology. Traditionally, it was impossible to study huge mountain ranges hiding beneath sea-ice formations. Today, new robotic technologies allow scientists to analyze underwater surface features and to monitor specific volcanic eruptions on a regular basis.

https://arctic.ru/analitic/20181107/801083.html

Now, as for those methane emissions:

For decades, efforts to mitigate c*****e c****e have been centred on reducing carbon dioxide (CO₂) emissions. However, the latest report by the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on C*****e C****e (IPCC) has called attention to the role of another gas in g****l w*****g: methane.

Methane is one of the biggest contributors to g****l w*****g, second only to CO₂. The IPCC suggests that this gas is responsible for between 30 % and 50 % of the temperature increase.

In 2019, methane in the atmosphere reached record levels — around two and a half times more than those of the pre-industrial era. Some of the scientific community's data is worrisome, since methane is one of the most potent gases in terms of the surge in global temperature.

https://www.activesustainability.com/c*****e-c****e/methane-greenhouse-gas/
The study, published in the journal Communications... (show quote)


And the Bering sea is still freezing ass cold

Reply
Aug 14, 2022 12:12:31   #
Gatsby
 
elledee wrote:
And the Bering sea is still freezing ass cold


Wrong Sea, my post is about the Barents Sea: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barents_Sea


And it's now 7 degrees less "freezing ass cold" than it was 50 years ago.

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Aug 14, 2022 12:33:20   #
Smedley_buzkill
 
Gatsby wrote:
Wrong Sea, my post is about the Barents Sea: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barents_Sea


And it's now 7 degrees less "freezing ass cold" than it was 50 years ago.


Tell that to my frozen ass LOL

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Aug 14, 2022 13:42:10   #
Gatsby
 
Smedley_buzk**l wrote:
Tell that to my frozen ass LOL


Try Deception Island, for a nice warm swim, amid its glaciers. (62°57'S, 60°38'W)

http://www.deceptionisland.aq/

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Aug 15, 2022 20:36:10   #
elledee
 
Gatsby wrote:
Wrong Sea, my post is about the Barents Sea: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barents_Sea


And it's now 7 degrees less "freezing ass cold" than it was 50 years ago.


And the barents sea is still freezing ass cold

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