Abstract
Gas-emission craters discovered in northern West Siberia may arise under a specific combination of shallow and deep-seated permafrost conditions. A formation model for such craters is suggested based on cryological and geological data from the Yamal Peninsula, where shallow permafrost encloses thick ground ice and lenses of intra-and subpermafrost saline cold water (cryopegs). Additionally, the permafrost in the area is highly saturated with gas and stores large accumulations of hydrocarbons that release gas-water fluids rising to the surface through faulted and fractured crusts. Gas emission craters in the Arctic can form in the presence of gas-filled cavities in ground ice caused by climate warming, rich sources of gas that can migrate and accumulate under pressure in the cavities, intrapermafrost gas-water fluids that circulate more rapidly in degrading permafrost, or weak permafrost caps over gas pools.
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Chuvilin, E. M., Sokolova, N. S., Bukhanov, B. A., Davletshina, D. A., & Spasennykh, M. Y. (2021). Formation of gas-emission craters in northern west siberia: Shallow controls. Geosciences (Switzerland), 11(9). https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences11090393
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