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Earth News Science

Mysterious Siberian Crater Is Just One of Many 88

New submitter Sardaukar86 sends this excerpt from a Washington Post report: In the middle of last summer came news of a bizarre occurrence no one could explain. Seemingly out of nowhere, a massive crater appeared in one of the planet's most inhospitable lands. Early estimates said the crater, nestled in a land called "the ends of the Earth" where temperatures can sink far below zero, yawned nearly 100 feet in diameter. The saga deepened. The Siberian crater wasn't alone. There were two more, ratcheting up the tension in a drama that hit its climax as a probable explanation surfaced. Global warming had thawed the permafrost, which had caused methane trapped inside the icy ground to explode.

Now, however, researchers fear there are more craters than anyone knew — and the repercussions could be huge. Russian scientists have now spotted a total of seven craters, five of which are in the Yamal Peninsula. Two of those holes have since turned into lakes. And one giant crater is rimmed by a ring of at least 20 mini-craters, the Siberian Times reported.
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Mysterious Siberian Crater Is Just One of Many

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  • Denial (Score:5, Funny)

    by ChrisKnight ( 16039 ) on Saturday February 28, 2015 @02:43PM (#49155045) Homepage
    Black Rock City Subway [blackrockcitysubway.com] categorically denies that these craters are a result of our sandworm breeding program. Scurrilous reports in The Daily Mail fail to take into account that sandworms react poorly to moist environments. Sometimes they even explode when exposed to water. Oh, wait...
    • by skyking ( 470723 )

      Yes, but when you drown one of the baby makers and consume the water ... I say let the sandworms breed - the resulting natural selection beats the heck out of anything the Bene Gesserit [junk science movement] can come up with.

  • 1. This land is geologically YOUNG, it is less than ten thousand years old

    2. The earth itself is warming the underside of the permafrost, even if there is contribution from global warming https://cage.uit.no/news/metha... [cage.uit.no]

    Thus there is no reason to wail about some imagined harbinger of doom because of these sinkholes.

    • by Brett Buck ( 811747 ) on Saturday February 28, 2015 @02:45PM (#49155063)

      What are you talking about? Pseudo-scientific bullshit it what /. is about!

      • In any case the Russians have the explanation. From TFA [siberiantimes.com]:

        For example, you all remember the magnificent shots of the Yamal crater in winter, made during the latest expedition in Novomber 2014. But do you know that Vladimir Putin, Emperor and Autocrat of All the Russias, was the first man in the world who went down the crater of gas emission riding on a bear? More than this, it was very risky, because no one could guarantee there would not be Ukrainian Kike-Banderites hiding down there.'

    • by Dutchmaan ( 442553 ) on Saturday February 28, 2015 @02:46PM (#49155065) Homepage
      The only one I see "wailing" here is you. People are confused and somewhat concerned, not "wailing".
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      1. This land is geologically YOUNG, it is less than ten thousand years old

      2. The earth itself is warming the underside of the permafrost, even if there is contribution from global warming https://cage.uit.no/news/metha... [cage.uit.no]

      Thus there is no reason to wail about some imagined harbinger of doom because of these sinkholes.

      iggymanz may very well be one of the worlds leading scientists with a better understanding of this than the interviewed researches, but regardless you seem to be attacking a straw man as most of the researchers interviewed in the article seems curious and open, have theories but says more research is needed. The only one with very strongly worded categorical claims here here is you.

    • by itzly ( 3699663 ) on Saturday February 28, 2015 @03:07PM (#49155127)

      If they were sinkholes, there wouldn't be ejecta around the crater edge. Something must have exploded.

      • Talk of the amount of Methane gas building up has been around for years. Here's one TV program the BBC broadcast 5 years ago.
        https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

        Imagine a large pocket of methane suddenly bursting free under some pressure. It would only take a little spark to set it off. For example, throw some stones onto some other stones. Just two stones hitting each other would make a nice spark etc.. That would easily create some big holes.

        But that's just an impressive side show. Its biggest danger h
        • by Jane Q. Public ( 1010737 ) on Saturday February 28, 2015 @06:52PM (#49156129)

          Imagine a large pocket of methane suddenly bursting free under some pressure. It would only take a little spark to set it off. For example, throw some stones onto some other stones. Just two stones hitting each other would make a nice spark etc.. That would easily create some big holes.

          It doesn't usually work that way. If it did, we'd have far more fires and explosions in homes that heat with gas.

          When gas leaks, the vast majority of the gassed area has too high concentration of gas, and too low concentration of oxygen, to burn. Further out, it's too much air and too little gas. It is only at the "interface" between those two conditions that combustion is possible, and relatively speaking that's a miniscule volume compared to either the "air" volume or the "gas" volume at any given time.

          In addition to that, if ignition does occur, usually only that small volume with the ideal mix burns, leaving (again) a volume of too-high concentration, and another too low. Explosions can alter that by chaotically mixing the gas with the surrounding air, and multiplying itself. But that seldom happens.

          To sum it all up: gas fires and explosions are not very common, because conditions have to be nearly ideal at the precise spot where the ignition takes place. They happen on TV vastly more often than in real life.

          • "It doesn't usually work that way. If it did, we'd have far more fires and explosions in homes that heat with gas. "

            Oh so according to you, it can't ever happen even in an area of many tens of thousands of acres, even if we wait years to find a few events. Try vastly increasing your scale of thinking before you try to be so closedmindedly dismissive. Plus Methane holes in ice, (like cracks) can be very irregular, so yes, they can mix with air, plus also you can have trapped Oxygen and/or air bubbles below
            • Oh so according to you, it can't ever happen even in an area of many tens of thousands of acres, even if we wait years to find a few events.

              That isn't what I said,

              Trying to put words in my mouth is a dick thing to do. Knock it off.

        • It would only take a little spark to set it off.

          If ignition actually happened, my bet is on a triboelectric spark. All that soil and ice getting tossed up will generate a charge, just like you see in thunderstorms and volcanic eruptions.

    • As long as it's not the re-awakening of a mantle plume under this!

      Siberian Traps [wikipedia.org]

      That puts any supervolcanoes to shame.

      Although the plates have shifted locations since that eruption.

    • The Great Extinction, caused by Siberia becoming one gigantic lava bed (probably after an asteroid strike), was a bit further back in time. Geologically, Siberia is old. You might be confusing the vestiges of Ice Age dessication (which was 10,000 years ago) but which involves the organics on the surface with the geology (aka rocks).

      Regardless, though, of how the craters are forming, the fact remains that an awful lot of greenhouse gas is being pumped into the air, an awful lot of information on early civili

  • by Anonymous Coward

    The scientific explanation would be that God is angry at the Russian heathens.

  • Do not fear (Score:5, Funny)

    by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Saturday February 28, 2015 @03:11PM (#49155143) Journal
    Gazprom is aggressively and heroically working to remove the methane from the ground in that region. With any luck, they'll be able to remove it all so we can burn it before anything goes wrong.
  • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Saturday February 28, 2015 @03:26PM (#49155195)
    There are a series of "craters" in the U.S. as well [google.com], though much older. The Carolina bays [wikipedia.org] are elliptical depressions located along the Atlantic seaboard of unknown origin. Theories of the origins being geologic or extraterrestrial impacts have come in and out of favor. Nobody really knows. (And before you say that impact craters are round regardless of the angle of impact, that's true until you get to very shallow impact angles. Then the craters end up being oval.)
  • by Anonymous Coward

    If these are truly explosions ejecting many tons of earth out of these holes, wouldn't they be detected by seismographs around the world, or at least in Russia? I think they should plant seismic detectors in the area so they can immediately detect the next explosion and quickly send a research team to site.

    • I don't know if it's in this article, but in an article I read before they planned to do exactly that - put three seismographs in the region, as currently whatever caused the holes did not register on the seismographs elsewhere in Russia (since it appears they are not really explosions but pressure caused ejections, the earth would not be as shaken).

      • by pjt33 ( 739471 )

        The Siberia Times article talks about a plan to put "not less than four seismic stations" in the region.

    • by tompaulco ( 629533 ) on Saturday February 28, 2015 @05:20PM (#49155629) Homepage Journal

      If these are truly explosions ejecting many tons of earth out of these holes, wouldn't they be detected by seismographs around the world, or at least in Russia? I think they should plant seismic detectors in the area so they can immediately detect the next explosion and quickly send a research team to site.

      Yes, if there had been a large explosion, even if it was not combustion, that amount of earth moving would have been measurable by seismic instruments thousands of miles away. Quarry explosions have been known to display as earthquakes as large as 2.7 on the Richter scale and felt for hundreds of miles, and those would pale in comparison to the amount of earth movement involved in the Siberian craters. It is much more likely that they escaping gas just gradually caused sinkholes, which would still create seismic events, but would be more likely many smaller ones and probably would not pick up on instruments unless they were within 100 miles.

  • by Okian Warrior ( 537106 ) on Saturday February 28, 2015 @04:48PM (#49155465) Homepage Journal

    This is old news - the craters have a known, definitive explanation [youtube.com] and it's not anything mysterious.

  • Any coordinates? Just looking at the Yamal Peninsula using Google Earth there are hundreds apon hundreds of what i would call very round lakes. I would say they could be old meteor hits but im no scientist.
  • The holes are not mysterious at all. There is even a name for them.

    http://wattsupwiththat.com/201... [wattsupwiththat.com]

  • A republican managed to throw a snowball during his speech, so obviously global warming can be ruled out!
  • We should all know these are left over from the attack by the Silver Surfer. The Fantastic Four, like all superhero groups, never cleans up after saving mankind.

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