A methane feedback from the past strikes again
What triggered the Palaeocene-Eocene thermal maximum (PETM) about 55 million years ago, which saw the fastest period of warming documented in Earth’s geological history? The PETM is associated with a rapid rise in greenhouse gases, particularly methane — but the big question is where did the methane come from?
The most common answer has been the ocean (methane hydrates) but new research in Nature, (subs. req’d) casts doubt on the ocean theory, finding chemical evidence instead that the methane came from terrestrial sources, bogs, which were themselves stimulated by rising temperatures — an amplifying feedback. The lead author says:
Indeed, research from last year found “thawing Siberian bogs are releasing more of the greenhouse gas methane than previously believed.” Why should we care about the source of the PETM?
Consider what scientists found when they analyzed data from a major expedition to retrieve deep marine sediments beneath the Arctic to understand the PETM, which they describe as a “widespread, extreme climatic warming that was associated with massive atmospheric greenhouse gas input.” This 2006 study, published in Nature (subs. req’d), found Artic temperatures almost beyond imagination–above 23°C (74°F)–temperatures more than 18°F warmer than current climate models had predicted when applied to this period. The three dozen authors conclude that existing climate models are missing crucial feedbacks that can significantly amplify polar warming.
That our climate models are underestimating global warming is a point I have many times. If bogs were a major amplifying feedback for the PETM, we may be in for “widespread, extreme climatic warming” if we don’t act quickly to slash greenhouse gas emissions before the same feedbacks kick in again this century.


September 20th, 2007 at 8:21 pm
Yup. Somehow need to geet policy markers to move rapidly.
Including ‘permanent’ carbon sequestration in the ground.