nerc.ac.uk

Greenland melt drives continuous export of methane from the ice-sheet bed

Lamarche-Gagnon, Guillaume; Wadham, Jemma L.; Sherwood Lollar, Barbara; Arndt, Sandra; Fietzek, Peer; Beaton, Alexander D.; Tedstone, Andrew J.; Telling, Jon; Bagshaw, Elizabeth A.; Hawkings, Jon R.; Kohler, Tyler J.; Zarsky, Jakub D.; Mowlem, Matthew C.; Anesio, Alexandre M.; Stibal, Marek. 2019 Greenland melt drives continuous export of methane from the ice-sheet bed. Nature, 565 (7737). 73-77. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0800-0

Before downloading, please read NORA policies.
[img]
Preview
Text
CH4_postprint (002).pdf

Download (2MB) | Preview

Abstract/Summary

Ice sheets are currently ignored in global methane budgets1,2. Although ice sheets have been proposed to contain large reserves of methane that may contribute to a rise in atmospheric methane concentration if released during periods of rapid ice retreat3,4, no data exist on the current methane footprint of ice sheets. Here we find that subglacially produced methane is rapidly driven to the ice margin by the efficient drainage system of a subglacial catchment of the Greenland ice sheet. We report the continuous export of methane-supersaturated waters (CH4(aq)) from the ice-sheet bed during the melt season. Pulses of high CH4(aq) concentration coincide with supraglacially forced subglacial flushing events, confirming a subglacial source and highlighting the influence of melt on methane export. Sustained methane fluxes over the melt season are indicative of subglacial methane reserves that exceed methane export, with an estimated 6.3 tonnes (discharge-weighted mean; range from 2.4 to 11 tonnes) of CH4(aq) transported laterally from the ice-sheet bed. Stable-isotope analyses reveal a microbial origin for methane, probably from a mixture of inorganic and ancient organic carbon buried beneath the ice. We show that subglacial hydrology is crucial for controlling methane fluxes from the ice sheet, with efficient drainage limiting the extent of methane oxidation5 to about 17 per cent of methane exported. Atmospheric evasion is the main methane sink once runoff reaches the ice margin, with estimated diffusive fluxes (4.4 to 28 millimoles of CH4 per square metre per day) rivalling that of major world rivers6. Overall, our results indicate that ice sheets overlie extensive, biologically active methanogenic wetlands and that high rates of methane export to the atmosphere can occur via efficient subglacial drainage pathways. Our findings suggest that such environments have been previously underappreciated and should be considered in Earth’s methane budget.

Item Type: Publication - Article
Digital Object Identifier (DOI): https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0800-0
ISSN: 0028-0836
Date made live: 23 Jan 2019 13:45 +0 (UTC)
URI: https://nora.nerc.ac.uk/id/eprint/522082

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item

Document Downloads

Downloads for past 30 days

Downloads per month over past year

More statistics for this item...