Complex of geophysical studies of the seyakha catastrophic gas blowout crater on the Yamal peninsula, Russian arctic

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Abstract

This article describes the main results of two Arctic expeditions in 2017–2018 to study the Seyakha Crater in the north of Western Siberia, Yamal Peninsula. It was formed on a place of a pingo-like feature (PLF) by huge blowout, self-ignition, and explosion of gas on 28 June 2017. In 2018, for the first time, the integration of geophysical studies on the Yamal Peninsula revealed in detail an Arctic gas-blowout crater within a river channel and adjacent land with permafrost. On the basis of unmanned aerial vehicle photography, echo sounding, and ground penetrating radar survey data processing, a 3D digital elevation model (DEM) of the crater and the structure of near-surface deposits was created. A previously unknown uplift inside the permafrost layers, probably connected with the processes of gas chamber formation, was revealed. A long period of continuous gas emission (mainly, biogenic methane) from the Seyakha C11 Crater (2017–2019) and other existing data show evidence for a gas-dynamic mechanism of the PLF growth and a volcanic type of eruption.

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Bogoyavlensky, V., Bogoyavlensky, I., Nikonov, R., & Kishankov, A. (2020). Complex of geophysical studies of the seyakha catastrophic gas blowout crater on the Yamal peninsula, Russian arctic. Geosciences (Switzerland), 10(6). https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences10060215

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