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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:01,070 --> 00:00:03,244 Viewers like you make this program possible. 2 00:00:03,279 --> 00:00:05,350 Support your local PBS station. 3 00:00:06,868 --> 00:00:09,699 ♪ 4 00:00:12,840 --> 00:00:16,395 NARRATOR: What happens when a frozen world locked away for millennia 5 00:00:16,430 --> 00:00:18,915 starts to thaw? 6 00:00:20,606 --> 00:00:23,920 In 2014, a helicopter crew flying over Siberia 7 00:00:23,954 --> 00:00:26,819 discovers something mysterious: 8 00:00:26,854 --> 00:00:29,926 a crater more than 80 feet wide 9 00:00:29,960 --> 00:00:33,067 and deeper than a 15-story building. 10 00:00:34,379 --> 00:00:36,864 Sinkholes are nothing new, 11 00:00:36,898 --> 00:00:40,109 but this is no ordinary sinkhole. 12 00:00:44,458 --> 00:00:46,736 SUSAN NATALI: The ground has exploded. 13 00:00:46,770 --> 00:00:50,084 There's no way... this is not real. 14 00:00:50,119 --> 00:00:54,813 NARRATOR: More Siberian craters have since been discovered. 15 00:00:54,847 --> 00:00:57,505 There's even evidence they may be appearing in Alaska. 16 00:00:59,611 --> 00:01:01,682 TAYLOR SULLIVAN: The lake bottom went from being 17 00:01:01,716 --> 00:01:03,753 flat, flat, flat, and then it just dropped out. 18 00:01:05,824 --> 00:01:09,862 NARRATOR: And they show no sign of stopping. 19 00:01:09,897 --> 00:01:13,556 Now, scientists from around the globe race to understand 20 00:01:13,590 --> 00:01:15,627 a hidden world: 21 00:01:15,661 --> 00:01:18,595 permafrost, a layer of frozen earth 22 00:01:18,630 --> 00:01:22,496 spanning a quarter of the Northern Hemisphere's land mass. 23 00:01:22,530 --> 00:01:26,983 This ancient freezer is beginning to thaw, 24 00:01:27,017 --> 00:01:29,986 revealing its deepest secrets... 25 00:01:30,020 --> 00:01:32,437 Pretty exciting, this is a mammoth bone right here. 26 00:01:32,471 --> 00:01:37,200 NARRATOR:...releasing over half a billion tons of carbon every year... 27 00:01:37,235 --> 00:01:39,064 JANELLE SHARP: It was just insane, like, the water 28 00:01:39,099 --> 00:01:40,997 is boiling around you. 29 00:01:41,031 --> 00:01:43,655 NARRATOR:...and threatening local communities. 30 00:01:43,689 --> 00:01:45,726 LARS NELSON: Houses need to be torn down. 31 00:01:45,760 --> 00:01:47,900 We're in the middle of a housing crisis. 32 00:01:47,935 --> 00:01:50,006 ♪ 33 00:01:50,040 --> 00:01:52,871 NARRATOR: Are the craters warning shots for our climate future? 34 00:01:52,905 --> 00:01:56,116 KATEY WALTER ANTHONY: That is not included in climate models. 35 00:01:56,150 --> 00:01:59,360 That's a scary wildcard in the climate change story. 36 00:01:59,395 --> 00:02:02,122 NARRATOR: What new dangers lurk beneath 37 00:02:02,156 --> 00:02:05,573 this vast frozen landscape? 38 00:02:05,608 --> 00:02:09,957 And could they warm our planet even further? 39 00:02:09,991 --> 00:02:11,786 "Arctic Sinkholes." 40 00:02:11,821 --> 00:02:14,410 Right now, on "NOVA." 41 00:02:14,444 --> 00:02:23,315 ♪ 42 00:02:23,350 --> 00:02:29,528 [wildlife chirping, chittering] 43 00:02:29,563 --> 00:02:33,083 NARRATOR: The Yamal peninsula, Siberia. 44 00:02:33,118 --> 00:02:39,504 47,000 square miles of freezing tundra. 45 00:02:39,538 --> 00:02:42,196 ♪ 46 00:02:42,231 --> 00:02:44,267 Located in Northern Russia, 47 00:02:44,302 --> 00:02:47,201 the Yamal lies well above the Arctic Circle. 48 00:02:50,894 --> 00:02:54,519 It's home to around 10,000 Indigenous Nenet people, 49 00:02:54,553 --> 00:02:57,522 most living as nomadic reindeer herders. 50 00:02:59,144 --> 00:03:01,146 ♪ 51 00:03:01,181 --> 00:03:06,289 In their language, Yamal means "end of the land." 52 00:03:06,324 --> 00:03:08,602 It's now beginning to look like it. 53 00:03:08,636 --> 00:03:11,501 ♪ 54 00:03:11,536 --> 00:03:14,987 Giant craters were spotted in the North of Russia. 55 00:03:15,022 --> 00:03:19,164 They popped up out of nowhere in the Yamal peninsula. 56 00:03:21,028 --> 00:03:24,687 NATALI: When I first heard about the crater, I didn't believe it. 57 00:03:24,721 --> 00:03:26,136 I actually thought it was a made-up story. 58 00:03:26,171 --> 00:03:28,415 ♪ 59 00:03:28,449 --> 00:03:29,968 MARINA LEIBMAN: Believe me, I remember this date, 60 00:03:30,002 --> 00:03:32,350 and I will remember it forever, 61 00:03:32,384 --> 00:03:35,836 because it was absolutely exciting, 62 00:03:35,870 --> 00:03:38,632 something I have never seen before. 63 00:03:40,944 --> 00:03:45,086 NARRATOR: The mysterious crater is 150 feet deep. 64 00:03:45,121 --> 00:03:47,157 Filled up with rainwater, 65 00:03:47,192 --> 00:03:50,816 its volume is greater than ten Olympic swimming pools. 66 00:03:52,266 --> 00:03:55,269 The striking images go viral worldwide 67 00:03:55,304 --> 00:03:58,686 because no one can answer, what caused it? 68 00:03:58,721 --> 00:04:05,175 ♪ 69 00:04:05,210 --> 00:04:07,661 Vasily Bogoyavlensky is an expert 70 00:04:07,695 --> 00:04:09,352 on the geology of the Yamal. 71 00:04:12,631 --> 00:04:15,047 With other scientists, he choppers out to the scene. 72 00:04:15,082 --> 00:04:22,123 ♪ 73 00:04:24,333 --> 00:04:26,611 BOGOYAVLENSKY: When we just came to this crater, of course, 74 00:04:26,645 --> 00:04:31,788 we didn't know for sure what was there. 75 00:04:31,823 --> 00:04:34,584 We never saw something like that, never. 76 00:04:34,619 --> 00:04:38,519 ♪ 77 00:04:38,554 --> 00:04:41,695 NARRATOR: This isn't the first massive pit to open up. 78 00:04:41,729 --> 00:04:45,319 [people crying out] 79 00:04:45,354 --> 00:04:49,323 ♪ 80 00:04:49,358 --> 00:04:51,394 Across the world, gaping sinkholes 81 00:04:51,429 --> 00:04:52,947 have appeared due to water 82 00:04:52,982 --> 00:04:56,572 or erosion weakening the ground beneath, 83 00:04:56,606 --> 00:04:59,264 swallowing cars whole 84 00:04:59,299 --> 00:05:03,475 and wreaking havoc in towns and cities. 85 00:05:04,959 --> 00:05:07,341 But while the Yamal crater looks at first 86 00:05:07,376 --> 00:05:09,239 like an ordinary sinkhole, 87 00:05:09,274 --> 00:05:13,692 there's something unusual visible around the edges. 88 00:05:13,727 --> 00:05:15,349 [Bogoyavlensky speaking Russian] 89 00:05:15,384 --> 00:05:17,800 ♪ 90 00:05:17,834 --> 00:05:22,114 NARRATOR: Most sinkholes have a rim that is flat, not raised. 91 00:05:22,149 --> 00:05:25,428 And while sinkholes collapse inwards, 92 00:05:25,463 --> 00:05:32,228 the team discovers debris spread far outside the crater. 93 00:05:32,262 --> 00:05:34,851 Pieces of rocks and ice are flying, 94 00:05:34,886 --> 00:05:37,578 sometimes in quite long distance, 95 00:05:37,613 --> 00:05:41,996 from 200 meters to 500 meters. 96 00:05:42,031 --> 00:05:45,690 And in one case, it was distance to 900 meters. 97 00:05:45,724 --> 00:05:47,968 NARRATOR: Debris like this 98 00:05:48,002 --> 00:05:51,109 can be thrown out by the impact of an asteroid. 99 00:05:51,143 --> 00:05:54,526 But there are no other signs of a massive object 100 00:05:54,561 --> 00:05:58,081 striking Earth. 101 00:05:58,116 --> 00:06:00,083 For the scientists, that leaves only one 102 00:06:00,118 --> 00:06:01,982 reasonable explanation. 103 00:06:03,570 --> 00:06:08,057 A gigantic natural explosion. 104 00:06:10,853 --> 00:06:12,095 NATALI: I don't know if there are many 105 00:06:12,130 --> 00:06:15,927 Earth system processes that have never occurred... 106 00:06:15,961 --> 00:06:17,066 I mean, in my lifetime, 107 00:06:17,100 --> 00:06:19,517 or at least to scientific understanding... 108 00:06:19,551 --> 00:06:21,173 that have never occurred and that we're starting to see 109 00:06:21,208 --> 00:06:24,694 as a new process. 110 00:06:24,729 --> 00:06:29,527 NARRATOR: So what could have provided the power for such a massive blast? 111 00:06:29,561 --> 00:06:33,289 There is no sign of lava or volcanic rock, 112 00:06:33,323 --> 00:06:36,913 so this clearly isn't a volcano. 113 00:06:36,948 --> 00:06:39,778 But exploring inside the crater, 114 00:06:39,813 --> 00:06:42,056 sampling the air and water at the bottom, 115 00:06:42,091 --> 00:06:45,266 the scientists do discover an intriguing clue: 116 00:06:45,301 --> 00:06:50,582 unusually high levels of a single gas, methane. 117 00:06:50,617 --> 00:06:53,861 ♪ 118 00:06:53,896 --> 00:06:56,761 Used for cooking and heating, 119 00:06:56,795 --> 00:07:00,316 methane is a flammable gas made from carbon and hydrogen. 120 00:07:00,350 --> 00:07:02,214 [exploding] 121 00:07:02,249 --> 00:07:06,080 When combined with air, it ignites easily. 122 00:07:06,115 --> 00:07:09,083 ♪ 123 00:07:09,118 --> 00:07:11,292 BOGOYAVLENSKY: So this is huge bomb. 124 00:07:11,327 --> 00:07:13,260 Methane bomb. 125 00:07:17,989 --> 00:07:19,542 NARRATOR: But before scientists can determine 126 00:07:19,577 --> 00:07:22,442 where the methane came from... 127 00:07:24,409 --> 00:07:28,793 ...more giant craters are discovered. 128 00:07:28,827 --> 00:07:33,107 Investigating, scientists find new evidence of methane. 129 00:07:35,109 --> 00:07:39,493 Since 2014, at least eight confirmed craters 130 00:07:39,528 --> 00:07:42,427 have been found on or close to the Yamal. 131 00:07:46,362 --> 00:07:48,295 But the growing number of craters 132 00:07:48,329 --> 00:07:51,919 isn't the scientists' only concern. 133 00:07:51,954 --> 00:07:54,404 They notice a climate connection. 134 00:07:54,439 --> 00:07:57,511 [birds twittering] 135 00:07:57,546 --> 00:08:00,514 2014, when the first crater appears, 136 00:08:00,549 --> 00:08:04,173 followed one of the hottest years on record in Russia. 137 00:08:04,207 --> 00:08:07,348 And all the craters are discovered during a period 138 00:08:07,383 --> 00:08:10,351 of uncharacteristically warm weather in Siberia. 139 00:08:13,976 --> 00:08:17,324 Since the late 19th century, the average global temperature 140 00:08:17,358 --> 00:08:20,603 has risen around two degrees Fahrenheit. 141 00:08:20,638 --> 00:08:23,641 But the Arctic is warming faster. 142 00:08:23,675 --> 00:08:25,815 It's currently heating up around twice as fast 143 00:08:25,850 --> 00:08:27,886 as the rest of the planet. 144 00:08:27,921 --> 00:08:30,648 ♪ 145 00:08:30,682 --> 00:08:32,339 The scientists begin to ask: 146 00:08:32,373 --> 00:08:37,862 could the explosive craters be connected to climate change? 147 00:08:37,896 --> 00:08:41,003 If so, what might they be telling us 148 00:08:41,037 --> 00:08:43,108 about Earth's climate future? 149 00:08:43,143 --> 00:08:50,115 ♪ 150 00:08:52,462 --> 00:08:56,363 While scientists on the Yamal study the crater, 151 00:08:56,397 --> 00:08:59,539 elsewhere in the Arctic, another team is about to discover 152 00:08:59,573 --> 00:09:01,644 new pieces of the puzzle. 153 00:09:01,679 --> 00:09:05,199 This time, in Alaska. 154 00:09:05,234 --> 00:09:07,892 ♪ 155 00:09:07,926 --> 00:09:10,619 Kotzebue, near Alaska's northwest coast. 156 00:09:12,241 --> 00:09:16,521 In 2017, a local pilot reports a lake that's behaving oddly. 157 00:09:19,075 --> 00:09:20,318 Now, a team of scientists 158 00:09:20,352 --> 00:09:23,010 that had been investigating returns to the site 159 00:09:23,045 --> 00:09:25,254 to continue its work. 160 00:09:25,288 --> 00:09:27,428 PHIL HANKE: So we just left Kotzebue, 161 00:09:27,463 --> 00:09:30,293 and then we crossed the Kotzebue Sound, 162 00:09:30,328 --> 00:09:33,987 and into the mouth of the Noatak, 163 00:09:34,021 --> 00:09:37,438 which was this, like, beautiful, sweeping landscape. 164 00:09:37,473 --> 00:09:40,200 SHARP: Look, there's the lake right there! 165 00:09:41,477 --> 00:09:43,375 Man, that's exciting! 166 00:09:43,410 --> 00:09:49,830 ♪ 167 00:09:49,865 --> 00:09:54,766 NARRATOR: Far from the nearest town lies Esieh Lake. 168 00:09:56,423 --> 00:10:00,772 Field technician Phil Hanke proceeds cautiously, 169 00:10:00,807 --> 00:10:03,672 hoping to avoid surprises. 170 00:10:03,706 --> 00:10:04,949 Hey, bear! 171 00:10:04,983 --> 00:10:06,088 SHARP: Hey, bear! 172 00:10:06,122 --> 00:10:08,642 HANKE: Hey, bear! 173 00:10:08,677 --> 00:10:09,954 Bear scat. 174 00:10:11,162 --> 00:10:12,128 Well, there's, uh, 175 00:10:12,163 --> 00:10:14,234 definitely bears around here, 176 00:10:14,268 --> 00:10:15,994 so we're going to have to take that into account 177 00:10:16,029 --> 00:10:18,583 when setting up camp. 178 00:10:18,618 --> 00:10:22,311 ♪ 179 00:10:22,345 --> 00:10:24,140 NARRATOR: Esieh Lake is located on the lands of 180 00:10:24,175 --> 00:10:28,317 the Indigenous Inupiat people. 181 00:10:28,351 --> 00:10:31,734 The state is home to over 13,000 Inupiaq people, 182 00:10:31,769 --> 00:10:35,565 whose traditional lands stretch across Northern Alaska. 183 00:10:37,119 --> 00:10:39,362 One of the scientists on the team has special ties 184 00:10:39,397 --> 00:10:43,332 to this community. 185 00:10:43,366 --> 00:10:45,783 My name is Janelle Sharp, my Inupiaq name is Anausuk. 186 00:10:45,817 --> 00:10:47,543 My mom is originally from Kotzebue. 187 00:10:47,577 --> 00:10:49,614 My family is from this region. 188 00:10:49,649 --> 00:10:52,030 And so this project is really 189 00:10:52,065 --> 00:10:53,307 special to me, because it's kind of, like, 190 00:10:53,342 --> 00:10:55,068 me coming back to my roots. 191 00:10:55,102 --> 00:10:57,277 ♪ 192 00:10:57,311 --> 00:11:00,418 NARRATOR: In 2017, Sharp and other scientists 193 00:11:00,452 --> 00:11:02,972 asked the local community to help them identify 194 00:11:03,007 --> 00:11:06,838 unusual features in the wilderness. 195 00:11:06,873 --> 00:11:11,049 A pilot named Eric Sieh told them that while flying over 196 00:11:11,084 --> 00:11:15,053 the area, he'd spotted something unusual. 197 00:11:15,088 --> 00:11:17,090 ♪ 198 00:11:17,124 --> 00:11:19,437 SHARP: If you fly low enough, even from the air, 199 00:11:19,471 --> 00:11:20,714 you can see the bubbling. 200 00:11:20,749 --> 00:11:22,716 ♪ 201 00:11:22,751 --> 00:11:24,166 HANKE: It's just mysterious. 202 00:11:24,200 --> 00:11:26,099 It looks like a Jacuzzi. 203 00:11:26,133 --> 00:11:28,584 And so you, you get up to it, and you can hear this... 204 00:11:28,618 --> 00:11:31,725 [imitates bubbling] 205 00:11:31,760 --> 00:11:34,935 Like, the water is boiling around you. 206 00:11:34,970 --> 00:11:36,661 [water bubbling loudly] 207 00:11:36,696 --> 00:11:41,114 ♪ 208 00:11:41,148 --> 00:11:43,910 NARRATOR: On their first visit, the team wanted to investigate, 209 00:11:43,944 --> 00:11:47,051 what's causing the bubbles? 210 00:11:47,085 --> 00:11:48,431 SHARP: We took gas samples, 211 00:11:48,466 --> 00:11:51,124 and then those were sent to the lab for analysis, 212 00:11:51,158 --> 00:11:56,716 and they found that it is a super-high amount of methane. 213 00:11:56,750 --> 00:11:58,752 NARRATOR: Methane leaks, known as seeps, 214 00:11:58,787 --> 00:12:01,065 have been found elsewhere in the Arctic. 215 00:12:01,099 --> 00:12:04,206 But they're usually much smaller. 216 00:12:05,897 --> 00:12:09,004 The team's measurements reveal that Esieh Lake is belching out 217 00:12:09,038 --> 00:12:13,456 over ten tons of methane every day. 218 00:12:13,491 --> 00:12:15,700 SULLIVAN: This is the highest flux 219 00:12:15,735 --> 00:12:19,669 methane seep that humans have discovered in the Arctic. 220 00:12:21,568 --> 00:12:23,950 The amount of methane you see is staggering. 221 00:12:23,984 --> 00:12:29,507 ♪ 222 00:12:29,541 --> 00:12:31,233 NARRATOR: From the shore, it's difficult to see 223 00:12:31,267 --> 00:12:35,616 where the methane is coming from. 224 00:12:35,651 --> 00:12:38,999 So the team decides to get closer to the source. 225 00:12:39,034 --> 00:12:42,485 SULLIVAN: Hypothermia is obviously the main danger. 226 00:12:42,520 --> 00:12:44,936 Second is me getting air. 227 00:12:44,971 --> 00:12:48,629 I'm very curious about what's down there. 228 00:12:48,664 --> 00:12:53,600 ♪ 229 00:12:59,779 --> 00:13:04,231 NARRATOR: Sullivan finds that the lake is shallow... just a few feet deep. 230 00:13:04,266 --> 00:13:06,130 But then, he follows the lake floor 231 00:13:06,164 --> 00:13:09,098 towards the source of the bubbles. 232 00:13:12,136 --> 00:13:13,275 SULLIVAN: I was kicking really hard 233 00:13:13,309 --> 00:13:14,586 to stay down along the bottom, 234 00:13:14,621 --> 00:13:16,381 and I was moving my hands along it. 235 00:13:16,416 --> 00:13:18,970 And it went from this mushy lake bottom 236 00:13:19,005 --> 00:13:21,386 that was flat, flat, flat, 237 00:13:21,421 --> 00:13:22,698 and then it just dropped out. 238 00:13:22,732 --> 00:13:29,325 ♪ 239 00:13:29,360 --> 00:13:31,776 SULLIVAN: That gets deep so quickly. 240 00:13:31,811 --> 00:13:34,054 HANKE: Yeah. It's like you're on the bottom, 241 00:13:34,089 --> 00:13:36,298 you're on the bottom, bottom's gone. 242 00:13:36,332 --> 00:13:39,853 NARRATOR: Sullivan finds the methane bubbles are streaming up 243 00:13:39,888 --> 00:13:42,269 from the hole in the lake floor. 244 00:13:42,304 --> 00:13:43,270 SULLIVAN: The bubbling, 245 00:13:43,305 --> 00:13:44,616 it, it sounded like seeping gas, 246 00:13:44,651 --> 00:13:46,653 as if it was even from a propane tank. 247 00:13:46,687 --> 00:13:50,553 ♪ 248 00:13:50,588 --> 00:13:51,692 HANKE: How'd it go? 249 00:13:51,727 --> 00:13:53,625 SULLIVAN: Still going down! SHARP: Wow. 250 00:13:53,660 --> 00:13:55,524 [breathing heavily] 251 00:13:55,558 --> 00:13:59,839 NARRATOR: With the lake bottom too dark to see, 252 00:13:59,873 --> 00:14:02,703 the team deploys a sonar scan. 253 00:14:05,361 --> 00:14:09,987 Most of this bed is around three feet deep. 254 00:14:10,021 --> 00:14:11,471 But beneath the streams of bubbles, 255 00:14:11,505 --> 00:14:15,889 the ground abruptly falls away, 256 00:14:15,924 --> 00:14:18,581 at its deepest reaching 50 feet. 257 00:14:18,616 --> 00:14:19,928 Why does a lake floor 258 00:14:19,962 --> 00:14:26,624 otherwise flat and shallow contain such a massive hole? 259 00:14:26,658 --> 00:14:28,488 [rotor blades whirring] 260 00:14:28,522 --> 00:14:30,973 On the Yamal, scientists believe a methane leak 261 00:14:31,008 --> 00:14:33,631 blew out a huge crater. 262 00:14:35,150 --> 00:14:38,429 Esieh Lake is another sign within the Arctic 263 00:14:38,463 --> 00:14:42,847 that beneath the surface, methane is stirring. 264 00:14:44,193 --> 00:14:45,505 So could more craters... 265 00:14:45,539 --> 00:14:48,888 and more methane... be on the way? 266 00:14:48,922 --> 00:14:50,337 ♪ 267 00:14:50,372 --> 00:14:53,409 As well as methane, there's one more clue that links 268 00:14:53,444 --> 00:14:55,722 Esieh Lake and the Yamal craters. 269 00:14:55,756 --> 00:14:57,482 [birds twittering] 270 00:14:57,517 --> 00:15:02,349 Both are located on the same type of frozen terrain: 271 00:15:02,384 --> 00:15:05,007 permafrost. 272 00:15:05,042 --> 00:15:08,908 ♪ 273 00:15:08,942 --> 00:15:11,600 Most permafrost is found in the land masses 274 00:15:11,634 --> 00:15:13,015 of high northern latitudes, 275 00:15:13,050 --> 00:15:17,744 including Russia, Canada, and most of Alaska, 276 00:15:17,778 --> 00:15:23,198 Covering an area almost as large as the U.S. and Canada combined. 277 00:15:24,785 --> 00:15:30,343 Permafrost can stretch almost a mile beneath Earth's surface. 278 00:15:30,377 --> 00:15:33,173 It's defined as any ground whose temperature remains at 279 00:15:33,208 --> 00:15:35,348 or below 32 degrees Fahrenheit 280 00:15:35,382 --> 00:15:38,972 for two or more consecutive years. 281 00:15:39,007 --> 00:15:42,251 But it can remain frozen for millennia. 282 00:15:43,977 --> 00:15:46,635 ♪ 283 00:15:46,669 --> 00:15:49,224 Recently, rising Arctic temperatures have meant that 284 00:15:49,258 --> 00:15:52,503 in some regions, the permafrost has started to thaw. 285 00:15:56,886 --> 00:15:58,819 [birds twittering] 286 00:15:58,854 --> 00:15:59,993 Just how fast 287 00:16:00,028 --> 00:16:03,065 and the danger this may pose to our climate 288 00:16:03,100 --> 00:16:07,104 is revealed 450 miles from Esieh Lake. 289 00:16:07,138 --> 00:16:12,074 Near the town of Fox, in Interior Alaska, 290 00:16:12,109 --> 00:16:14,766 something strange is happening in the woods. 291 00:16:14,801 --> 00:16:16,492 [birds twittering, branches rustling] 292 00:16:16,527 --> 00:16:19,012 ♪ 293 00:16:19,047 --> 00:16:20,289 TOM DOUGLAS: This is what people refer to 294 00:16:20,324 --> 00:16:22,533 as this drunken forest. 295 00:16:22,567 --> 00:16:26,157 You can see a bunch of these have kind of started to go. 296 00:16:26,192 --> 00:16:28,366 They're just having a hard time getting enough rooting in 297 00:16:28,401 --> 00:16:30,817 to grow straight. 298 00:16:30,851 --> 00:16:33,889 NARRATOR: This forest sits on top of permafrost. 299 00:16:33,923 --> 00:16:38,031 Scientist Tom Douglas has been tracking some 300 00:16:38,066 --> 00:16:39,653 surprising changes taking place 301 00:16:39,688 --> 00:16:43,381 as the permafrost starts to thaw. 302 00:16:43,416 --> 00:16:46,108 DOUGLAS: I mean, look at those huge birch trees. 303 00:16:46,143 --> 00:16:47,351 They're literally just 304 00:16:47,385 --> 00:16:49,974 riding down those slopes as it's all degrading. 305 00:16:50,009 --> 00:16:52,045 ♪ 306 00:16:52,080 --> 00:16:54,013 I mean, this goes a good 20 or so meters below us. 307 00:16:54,047 --> 00:16:55,945 This is a giant hole. 308 00:16:55,980 --> 00:16:58,741 You can hear water in there. [water rushing] 309 00:16:58,776 --> 00:17:00,053 This whole landscape is just very slowly 310 00:17:00,088 --> 00:17:02,021 sliding downhill with gravity. 311 00:17:02,055 --> 00:17:04,057 ♪ 312 00:17:04,092 --> 00:17:05,300 This is a very dramatic 313 00:17:05,334 --> 00:17:07,819 and very rapid change in the landscape here 314 00:17:07,854 --> 00:17:10,132 that, again, we're seeing in a matter of years. 315 00:17:10,167 --> 00:17:13,825 Not decades, not 20 years, not by 2100. 316 00:17:13,860 --> 00:17:16,000 Since 2018. 317 00:17:16,035 --> 00:17:17,484 It's pretty dramatic. 318 00:17:17,519 --> 00:17:19,486 ♪ 319 00:17:19,521 --> 00:17:24,008 NARRATOR: This rapid thaw is also affecting human settlements. 320 00:17:24,043 --> 00:17:26,114 Like Utqiagvik, the most northern city 321 00:17:26,148 --> 00:17:29,220 in the United States. 322 00:17:29,255 --> 00:17:31,015 ♪ 323 00:17:31,050 --> 00:17:37,263 This entire community sits on top of the Alaskan permafrost. 324 00:17:37,297 --> 00:17:41,129 Locals call it "the top of the world." 325 00:17:41,163 --> 00:17:42,578 ♪ 326 00:17:42,613 --> 00:17:44,339 GORDON BROWER: If you point that way, 327 00:17:44,373 --> 00:17:47,445 that's Greenland over there. 328 00:17:47,480 --> 00:17:50,034 Canada is over here. 329 00:17:50,069 --> 00:17:52,864 And that way is, guess what. 330 00:17:52,899 --> 00:17:54,901 [laughing]: Russia. 331 00:17:56,730 --> 00:17:57,904 NARRATOR: Gordon Brower 332 00:17:57,938 --> 00:18:01,218 is a Native Alaskan Inupiaq whaling captain. 333 00:18:01,252 --> 00:18:06,085 His people have lived in this region for thousands of years. 334 00:18:06,119 --> 00:18:09,122 BROWER: Communities like these, they're special. 335 00:18:09,157 --> 00:18:11,814 A lot of the cultures in the world 336 00:18:11,849 --> 00:18:15,404 are assimilated, and we're assimilated here, 337 00:18:15,439 --> 00:18:19,132 but we brought our culture and our ways 338 00:18:19,167 --> 00:18:21,548 to the future with us. 339 00:18:21,583 --> 00:18:25,449 And you can come here and still see the same celebration 340 00:18:25,483 --> 00:18:28,659 that took place 10,000 years ago. 341 00:18:28,693 --> 00:18:31,144 ♪ 342 00:18:31,179 --> 00:18:35,183 NARRATOR: For five decades, Brower has been hunting in these waters, 343 00:18:35,217 --> 00:18:38,669 part of an ancient Inupiaq tradition of living off the land 344 00:18:38,703 --> 00:18:41,396 and the sea. 345 00:18:41,430 --> 00:18:44,985 We don't have Walmart or we don't have McDonald's up here. 346 00:18:45,020 --> 00:18:46,884 We have other small restaurants 347 00:18:46,918 --> 00:18:48,851 and other things to do like that. 348 00:18:48,886 --> 00:18:51,095 But the majority of food resources 349 00:18:51,130 --> 00:18:56,065 are still hunted today: seals, whales, belugas, 350 00:18:56,100 --> 00:18:58,171 ducks, geese, 351 00:18:58,206 --> 00:19:00,760 caribou, wolves... 352 00:19:00,794 --> 00:19:07,111 All of those are still traded and used. 353 00:19:09,286 --> 00:19:10,735 NARRATOR: With little fresh food available 354 00:19:10,770 --> 00:19:14,498 in winter, generations of Native Alaskans have depended on 355 00:19:14,532 --> 00:19:18,916 cellars carved out of the permafrost. 356 00:19:18,950 --> 00:19:22,264 BROWER: Well, we're in an ice cellar. 357 00:19:22,299 --> 00:19:26,372 My folks used this ice cellar for years and years. 358 00:19:26,406 --> 00:19:28,926 This is where I put a whale 359 00:19:28,960 --> 00:19:32,550 and store it in trust for the community. 360 00:19:34,207 --> 00:19:37,935 NARRATOR: But thawing permafrost means this natural deep freeze 361 00:19:37,969 --> 00:19:40,558 isn't as cold as it used to be. 362 00:19:40,593 --> 00:19:44,079 As Brower discovered. 363 00:19:44,113 --> 00:19:47,220 BROWER: I had checked on the meat and told my brothers, 364 00:19:47,255 --> 00:19:49,533 you know, "We got to pull that meat out. 365 00:19:49,567 --> 00:19:51,845 It's draining, and we don't want that." 366 00:19:51,880 --> 00:19:54,710 I've resorted to pulling a whole whale out of there 367 00:19:54,745 --> 00:19:56,885 and putting it into walk-in freezers. 368 00:19:56,919 --> 00:19:59,508 ♪ 369 00:19:59,543 --> 00:20:02,477 NARRATOR: Thawing ice cellars aren't the only threat rising temperatures 370 00:20:02,511 --> 00:20:05,134 pose to this community. 371 00:20:05,169 --> 00:20:08,379 Recently, sea ice that used to protect the shore 372 00:20:08,414 --> 00:20:13,212 from storms has begun to melt. 373 00:20:13,246 --> 00:20:15,455 BROWER: Storm surge is pretty dramatic. 374 00:20:15,490 --> 00:20:17,561 And it's going to 375 00:20:17,595 --> 00:20:20,564 wreak havoc on your coastline here. 376 00:20:20,598 --> 00:20:23,636 And the thing about is, when it's reaching the edge, 377 00:20:23,670 --> 00:20:26,259 a lot of the banks are permafrost-rich, 378 00:20:26,294 --> 00:20:28,813 and it undercuts them. 379 00:20:28,848 --> 00:20:32,438 NARRATOR: Exposed by the storms, 380 00:20:32,472 --> 00:20:35,475 permafrost is thawing and crumbling away. 381 00:20:38,478 --> 00:20:41,412 Now communities like Utqiagvik 382 00:20:41,447 --> 00:20:44,519 are trying to protect their homes. 383 00:20:44,553 --> 00:20:45,623 BROWER: These are all 384 00:20:45,658 --> 00:20:51,560 our local efforts to stop the storm surge. 385 00:20:51,595 --> 00:20:54,598 This is our way of trying to save the town. 386 00:20:57,117 --> 00:20:59,154 NARRATOR: With a retreating coastline 387 00:20:59,188 --> 00:21:01,087 and warming ice cellars, 388 00:21:01,121 --> 00:21:05,298 local communities are hit twice by thawing permafrost. 389 00:21:07,438 --> 00:21:12,236 But the big thaw is an Arctic-wide problem. 390 00:21:12,271 --> 00:21:14,618 NATALI: Through the next decades and century, 391 00:21:14,652 --> 00:21:16,930 we expect anywhere, across the Arctic, 392 00:21:16,965 --> 00:21:19,864 between 30% and 70% of near-surface permafrost 393 00:21:19,899 --> 00:21:21,176 will be lost. 394 00:21:21,210 --> 00:21:24,490 That range partly has to do with just some uncertainty 395 00:21:24,524 --> 00:21:26,285 in the science, but largely has to do with 396 00:21:26,319 --> 00:21:28,459 how much warming will happen in the future. 397 00:21:28,494 --> 00:21:33,982 NARRATOR: Arctic communities are facing the immediate effects now. 398 00:21:34,016 --> 00:21:36,847 But scientists are concerned this loss has implications 399 00:21:36,881 --> 00:21:38,573 for the entire planet. 400 00:21:40,713 --> 00:21:44,164 So why is permafrost thaw so dangerous? 401 00:21:44,199 --> 00:21:48,341 And what is the link to methane? 402 00:21:48,376 --> 00:21:51,827 [birds twittering] 403 00:21:51,862 --> 00:21:53,967 Back near Fox in Interior Alaska, 404 00:21:54,002 --> 00:21:56,970 Tom Douglas is about to do something only possible 405 00:21:57,005 --> 00:21:59,283 in a few places on Earth... 406 00:21:59,318 --> 00:22:03,943 walk deep down into the permafrost itself. 407 00:22:07,533 --> 00:22:10,190 The Fox permafrost tunnel reveals there's more 408 00:22:10,225 --> 00:22:12,331 to permafrost than frozen earth. 409 00:22:14,954 --> 00:22:17,059 DOUGLAS: That's a horn. 410 00:22:17,094 --> 00:22:19,234 That's from the longhorn steppe bison. 411 00:22:19,268 --> 00:22:20,822 And they are extinct now, 412 00:22:20,856 --> 00:22:22,927 but back 18,000 to 40,000 years ago, 413 00:22:22,962 --> 00:22:26,448 you know, there were steppe bison here. 414 00:22:26,483 --> 00:22:27,484 Pretty exciting, 415 00:22:27,518 --> 00:22:29,486 this is a mammoth bone right here. 416 00:22:29,520 --> 00:22:31,004 You can just see kind of the 417 00:22:31,039 --> 00:22:33,144 piece of it sticking out right there. 418 00:22:33,179 --> 00:22:36,216 It's pretty big. 419 00:22:36,251 --> 00:22:38,253 NARRATOR: The tunnel reveals that permafrost contains 420 00:22:38,287 --> 00:22:42,326 vast quantities of organic matter. 421 00:22:42,361 --> 00:22:44,190 DOUGLAS: So these are, 422 00:22:44,224 --> 00:22:46,295 these are sedges, kind of like grass. 423 00:22:46,330 --> 00:22:47,918 And you can see that they, they're green. 424 00:22:47,952 --> 00:22:49,713 They still have their chlorophyll in 'em. 425 00:22:49,747 --> 00:22:51,715 They're also upside down. 426 00:22:51,749 --> 00:22:55,926 This block fell into a water feature that then froze, 427 00:22:55,960 --> 00:22:59,895 probably 20,000 or so years ago. 428 00:22:59,930 --> 00:23:02,415 ♪ 429 00:23:02,450 --> 00:23:04,279 NARRATOR: This ancient organic matter, 430 00:23:04,313 --> 00:23:07,765 like all life on our planet, contains carbon. 431 00:23:07,800 --> 00:23:10,112 [birds twittering] 432 00:23:10,147 --> 00:23:12,667 And is part of a vital Earth system called 433 00:23:12,701 --> 00:23:16,015 the carbon cycle. 434 00:23:16,049 --> 00:23:18,327 ♪ 435 00:23:18,362 --> 00:23:24,368 As they grow, plants absorb carbon dioxide. 436 00:23:24,403 --> 00:23:26,991 When they die, they, or the animals that have eaten them, 437 00:23:27,026 --> 00:23:29,753 decompose, 438 00:23:29,787 --> 00:23:34,792 releasing some of this carbon back into the atmosphere. 439 00:23:34,827 --> 00:23:38,555 But in the freezing Arctic, 440 00:23:38,589 --> 00:23:40,488 decomposition happens slowly. 441 00:23:40,522 --> 00:23:42,973 So over millennia, 442 00:23:43,007 --> 00:23:45,631 a huge amount of organic matter became permafrost 443 00:23:45,665 --> 00:23:48,357 before it could decompose, 444 00:23:48,392 --> 00:23:52,741 its carbon frozen in time. 445 00:23:52,776 --> 00:23:54,502 DOUGLAS: In the late '90s into the 2000s, 446 00:23:54,536 --> 00:23:57,021 people start to look at the stocks of carbon in permafrost. 447 00:23:57,056 --> 00:24:01,647 And it's, it's a lot, it's about 1,400 billion metric tons. 448 00:24:01,681 --> 00:24:03,649 It's almost twice as much carbon 449 00:24:03,683 --> 00:24:05,858 as is currently in Earth's atmosphere. 450 00:24:05,892 --> 00:24:08,274 When we walked in, we noted that smell, right? 451 00:24:08,308 --> 00:24:12,416 You're smelling ancient bacteria and carbon being oxidized. 452 00:24:12,451 --> 00:24:15,557 It's almost like a, well, I've heard anything from, like, 453 00:24:15,592 --> 00:24:18,353 a French cheese, to barnyard, 454 00:24:18,387 --> 00:24:20,976 but it's kind of that organic, almost a late fall, 455 00:24:21,011 --> 00:24:22,668 wet leaf kind of organic smell. 456 00:24:22,702 --> 00:24:25,981 You are smelling permafrost carbon being oxidized. 457 00:24:26,016 --> 00:24:27,224 And so the big question 458 00:24:27,258 --> 00:24:29,191 is, that carbon that we smell, that's all over 459 00:24:29,226 --> 00:24:30,538 this tunnel walls, 460 00:24:30,572 --> 00:24:31,780 what's its ultimate fate? 461 00:24:31,815 --> 00:24:33,092 And there's a lot of people working on that. 462 00:24:34,921 --> 00:24:37,165 NARRATOR: In other words, how much of this carbon 463 00:24:37,199 --> 00:24:39,132 will end up in the atmosphere? 464 00:24:39,167 --> 00:24:42,584 And most importantly, how fast? 465 00:24:45,138 --> 00:24:46,692 ♪ 466 00:24:46,726 --> 00:24:50,109 Falmouth, Massachusetts. 467 00:24:50,143 --> 00:24:53,699 3,000 miles from the ice tunnel. 468 00:24:53,733 --> 00:24:56,356 Arctic ecologist Susan Natali investigates 469 00:24:56,391 --> 00:24:57,806 samples of permafrost 470 00:24:57,841 --> 00:25:00,913 to find out what happens when it thaws. 471 00:25:00,947 --> 00:25:04,226 NATALI: So these are permafrost cores that were collected 472 00:25:04,261 --> 00:25:07,264 from different locations across Alaska. 473 00:25:07,298 --> 00:25:10,094 Some of these are really dark, like particularly this one. 474 00:25:10,129 --> 00:25:11,475 And that dark color 475 00:25:11,510 --> 00:25:14,547 means that that has a lot of carbon in it. 476 00:25:14,582 --> 00:25:16,584 ♪ 477 00:25:16,618 --> 00:25:20,588 NARRATOR: As permafrost warms, its carbon thaws. 478 00:25:20,622 --> 00:25:24,833 And the carbon cycle starts up once again. 479 00:25:24,868 --> 00:25:27,698 So that carbon then is available for microbes to break down. 480 00:25:27,733 --> 00:25:30,598 And they use it for energy and they decompose it. 481 00:25:30,632 --> 00:25:31,944 And in that process, they're releasing 482 00:25:31,978 --> 00:25:33,221 carbon dioxide or methane. 483 00:25:33,255 --> 00:25:35,464 ♪ 484 00:25:35,499 --> 00:25:39,814 NARRATOR: Carbon dioxide and methane are both greenhouse gases. 485 00:25:41,229 --> 00:25:44,715 As Earth's surface absorbs energy from the sun, 486 00:25:44,750 --> 00:25:47,476 it radiates some of it back out as heat. 487 00:25:49,996 --> 00:25:53,379 In the atmosphere, greenhouse gases absorb this heat, 488 00:25:53,413 --> 00:25:55,968 radiating part of its energy back at Earth 489 00:25:56,002 --> 00:25:59,558 and heating up our planet. 490 00:25:59,592 --> 00:26:03,285 NATALI: Greenhouse gases are a concern because they trap heat. 491 00:26:03,320 --> 00:26:04,666 They're helpful to us because 492 00:26:04,701 --> 00:26:07,186 they, they make this habitable planet, 493 00:26:07,220 --> 00:26:09,188 but because there's too much in the atmosphere, 494 00:26:09,222 --> 00:26:11,259 they're now making this an unhabitable planet, 495 00:26:11,293 --> 00:26:12,536 or less habitable planet. 496 00:26:12,571 --> 00:26:14,745 ♪ 497 00:26:14,780 --> 00:26:17,610 NARRATOR: It's estimated that in the mid-18th century, 498 00:26:17,645 --> 00:26:21,234 there were over 2,000 gigatons of naturally occurring 499 00:26:21,269 --> 00:26:24,997 carbon-based greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. 500 00:26:27,206 --> 00:26:28,656 With industrialization, 501 00:26:28,690 --> 00:26:30,658 human-made greenhouse gas emissions 502 00:26:30,692 --> 00:26:33,453 began to add to this amount. 503 00:26:33,488 --> 00:26:36,595 By 2019, it's estimated the total had risen 504 00:26:36,629 --> 00:26:40,633 to over 3,000 gigatons. 505 00:26:40,668 --> 00:26:42,359 Over the last century and a half, 506 00:26:42,393 --> 00:26:44,533 Earth's average temperature increased around 507 00:26:44,568 --> 00:26:47,502 two degrees Fahrenheit. 508 00:26:47,536 --> 00:26:50,194 ♪ 509 00:26:50,229 --> 00:26:54,509 Scientists agree human emissions caused this warming. 510 00:26:56,580 --> 00:26:58,789 But recently, they've become concerned 511 00:26:58,824 --> 00:27:01,343 greenhouse gases being released by permafrost 512 00:27:01,378 --> 00:27:05,071 might be driving temperatures higher, too. 513 00:27:05,106 --> 00:27:07,108 As the name suggests, 514 00:27:07,142 --> 00:27:10,352 permafrost is permanently frozen ground. 515 00:27:10,387 --> 00:27:11,353 So we thought, 516 00:27:11,388 --> 00:27:13,735 "Okay, this carbon is 517 00:27:13,770 --> 00:27:16,393 very stable, so nothing is going to happen." 518 00:27:18,671 --> 00:27:21,778 But as permafrost starts to thaw, 519 00:27:21,812 --> 00:27:23,642 this carbon becomes vulnerable. 520 00:27:26,196 --> 00:27:28,577 NARRATOR: Since the mid-'70s, 521 00:27:28,612 --> 00:27:30,062 carbon dioxide emissions 522 00:27:30,096 --> 00:27:31,788 from the North Alaskan wilderness 523 00:27:31,822 --> 00:27:35,067 have spiked by more than 70%. 524 00:27:35,101 --> 00:27:39,312 But while we know a lot about carbon dioxide, 525 00:27:39,347 --> 00:27:41,280 the impact of another greenhouse gas 526 00:27:41,314 --> 00:27:45,111 coming out of the permafrost is less widely known... 527 00:27:45,146 --> 00:27:50,565 the very one escaping from the Yamal and Esieh Lake, 528 00:27:50,599 --> 00:27:53,637 methane. 529 00:27:53,672 --> 00:27:55,052 Methane is really important, 530 00:27:55,087 --> 00:27:56,709 because it's much more potent 531 00:27:56,744 --> 00:27:58,607 in terms of its ability to trap heat. 532 00:27:58,642 --> 00:28:02,266 So it's about 30 times more powerful than carbon dioxide. 533 00:28:02,301 --> 00:28:05,028 ♪ 534 00:28:05,062 --> 00:28:07,133 NARRATOR: Luckily, while carbon dioxide 535 00:28:07,168 --> 00:28:09,722 lasts centuries or longer in our atmosphere, 536 00:28:09,757 --> 00:28:13,415 methane only lasts around 12 years. 537 00:28:13,450 --> 00:28:16,798 But as a far more potent greenhouse gas, 538 00:28:16,833 --> 00:28:19,939 any large-scale increases in methane emissions 539 00:28:19,974 --> 00:28:23,736 have climate scientists seriously concerned. 540 00:28:23,771 --> 00:28:27,015 ♪ 541 00:28:27,050 --> 00:28:28,983 For now, more than half of methane emissions 542 00:28:29,017 --> 00:28:34,471 come from human sources like fossil fuels and agriculture, 543 00:28:34,505 --> 00:28:37,854 sources well understood by climate experts. 544 00:28:37,888 --> 00:28:40,580 But scientists are increasingly worried 545 00:28:40,615 --> 00:28:43,722 about methane emissions from permafrost. 546 00:28:43,756 --> 00:28:46,586 So far, they don't know 547 00:28:46,621 --> 00:28:49,279 how much methane the permafrost is releasing. 548 00:28:51,315 --> 00:28:53,490 And that's a big problem. 549 00:28:53,524 --> 00:28:56,044 In order to control our temperature, 550 00:28:56,079 --> 00:28:58,288 we have a certain amount of carbon 551 00:28:58,322 --> 00:29:00,911 that humans can release... that's our carbon budget. 552 00:29:02,602 --> 00:29:04,018 NARRATOR: In 2015, 553 00:29:04,052 --> 00:29:05,571 the international Paris Agreement 554 00:29:05,605 --> 00:29:10,162 set a target for limiting global warming. 555 00:29:10,196 --> 00:29:12,198 Its goal was to keep the temperature rise 556 00:29:12,233 --> 00:29:19,378 to well below two, preferably to 1.5 degrees Celsius. 557 00:29:21,173 --> 00:29:22,277 To stand a good chance 558 00:29:22,312 --> 00:29:25,039 of remaining below the 1.5-degree mark, 559 00:29:25,073 --> 00:29:28,283 one estimate states that humans could release a maximum of 560 00:29:28,318 --> 00:29:33,910 around 460 gigatons more carbon dioxide. 561 00:29:33,944 --> 00:29:37,845 But recent climate calculations are based on computer models 562 00:29:37,879 --> 00:29:41,262 with incomplete information. 563 00:29:41,296 --> 00:29:42,919 LEE: Unfortunately, 564 00:29:42,953 --> 00:29:45,059 a lot of these Earth system models 565 00:29:45,093 --> 00:29:49,097 that contribute to such goals 566 00:29:49,132 --> 00:29:52,445 do not take into account CO2 and methane emissions 567 00:29:52,480 --> 00:29:54,068 from permafrost. 568 00:29:55,759 --> 00:29:57,519 NARRATOR: The most recent carbon budgets 569 00:29:57,554 --> 00:30:01,316 have started to include permafrost carbon. 570 00:30:01,351 --> 00:30:04,388 But some scientists believe they still underestimate 571 00:30:04,423 --> 00:30:08,392 the amount of carbon the warming Arctic will release, 572 00:30:08,427 --> 00:30:11,810 making temperature goals harder to meet 573 00:30:11,844 --> 00:30:13,501 and putting more pressure on societies 574 00:30:13,535 --> 00:30:17,505 to dramatically cut their emissions to compensate. 575 00:30:17,539 --> 00:30:19,610 NATALI: So we think we have 576 00:30:19,645 --> 00:30:20,784 a certain amount of greenhouse gases 577 00:30:20,819 --> 00:30:22,061 that humans can release, 578 00:30:22,096 --> 00:30:23,200 but our target is wrong right now, 579 00:30:23,235 --> 00:30:24,615 because we're not accounting for 580 00:30:24,650 --> 00:30:25,893 potential permafrost emissions 581 00:30:25,927 --> 00:30:29,655 of methane and carbon dioxide. 582 00:30:29,689 --> 00:30:32,244 NARRATOR: Understanding the dynamics of thawing permafrost 583 00:30:32,278 --> 00:30:34,902 is now critical to predicting our climate future. 584 00:30:34,936 --> 00:30:39,872 So how much methane is permafrost emitting each year? 585 00:30:39,907 --> 00:30:44,877 And is this annual amount going to increase? 586 00:30:44,912 --> 00:30:47,915 [dogs yapping] 587 00:30:50,296 --> 00:30:51,297 HANKE: Good dogs! 588 00:30:51,332 --> 00:30:54,162 Straight ahead, on by, on by, on by. 589 00:30:54,197 --> 00:30:56,371 NARRATOR: Fairbanks, Interior Alaska. 590 00:30:56,406 --> 00:30:58,787 Ecologist Katey Walter Anthony 591 00:30:58,822 --> 00:31:01,135 is heading out onto the frozen terrain. 592 00:31:01,169 --> 00:31:03,344 HANKE: Haw! Haw! 593 00:31:03,378 --> 00:31:04,690 Come on, Biggy, come on. 594 00:31:04,724 --> 00:31:06,623 [dogs whining] 595 00:31:06,657 --> 00:31:07,693 NARRATOR: Walter Anthony was 596 00:31:07,727 --> 00:31:11,110 among the first to study Esieh Lake. 597 00:31:11,145 --> 00:31:12,732 She's found concerning evidence 598 00:31:12,767 --> 00:31:14,976 it's not the only lake in the permafrost region 599 00:31:15,011 --> 00:31:15,977 that's releasing methane. 600 00:31:16,012 --> 00:31:20,671 ♪ 601 00:31:20,706 --> 00:31:22,535 WALTER ANTHONY: So when you spear the spot, 602 00:31:22,570 --> 00:31:24,779 if I hear gas coming out, 603 00:31:24,813 --> 00:31:27,368 I'm going to try to ignite it. 604 00:31:27,402 --> 00:31:28,852 And if there's fire, we both need to get out of the way. 605 00:31:28,887 --> 00:31:29,922 Okay. 606 00:31:29,957 --> 00:31:31,890 Ready? Yep. 607 00:31:36,273 --> 00:31:37,585 Whoa... [flames roaring] 608 00:31:39,759 --> 00:31:41,313 That got me. 609 00:31:41,347 --> 00:31:42,624 Oh, shoot. 610 00:31:42,659 --> 00:31:43,625 Am I on fire? 611 00:31:43,660 --> 00:31:45,489 No... I was wondering. 612 00:31:45,524 --> 00:31:46,732 [both chuckle] 613 00:31:46,766 --> 00:31:47,698 What's smoking? 614 00:31:50,115 --> 00:31:52,634 [laughing] You okay? 615 00:31:52,669 --> 00:31:54,774 [laughing]: Yeah, I'm fine. [laughing] 616 00:31:54,809 --> 00:31:57,018 That was a good one. That was a good one. 617 00:31:57,053 --> 00:31:58,882 All right. 618 00:32:00,642 --> 00:32:02,265 NARRATOR: The methane comes from 619 00:32:02,299 --> 00:32:05,509 organic matter in permafrost thawing and decomposing 620 00:32:05,544 --> 00:32:07,235 at the bottom of the lake, 621 00:32:07,270 --> 00:32:12,551 then rising in methane bubbles to the surface. 622 00:32:12,585 --> 00:32:16,244 Across the Arctic, permafrost thaw 623 00:32:16,279 --> 00:32:20,559 is generating vast numbers of new lakes. 624 00:32:20,593 --> 00:32:21,560 As the soil warms, 625 00:32:21,594 --> 00:32:23,527 ice beneath the surface melts, 626 00:32:23,562 --> 00:32:28,084 causing the ground to slump and fill with water. 627 00:32:28,118 --> 00:32:30,914 And once a lake is formed, you can't stop it, 628 00:32:30,949 --> 00:32:32,053 because that water has heat, 629 00:32:32,088 --> 00:32:35,367 and it causes the ground to thaw so fast. 630 00:32:35,401 --> 00:32:39,888 NARRATOR: The lakes then start releasing methane. 631 00:32:39,923 --> 00:32:42,270 WALTER ANTHONY: As the methane escapes, 632 00:32:42,305 --> 00:32:43,754 it causes more permafrost to thaw, 633 00:32:43,789 --> 00:32:45,066 and more methane to be generated, 634 00:32:45,101 --> 00:32:47,068 which is more warming, and you get what's called 635 00:32:47,103 --> 00:32:48,863 a positive feedback cycle. 636 00:32:50,865 --> 00:32:52,349 NARRATOR: Positive feedback cycles 637 00:32:52,384 --> 00:32:53,902 from permafrost regions 638 00:32:53,937 --> 00:32:56,629 are another scenario not sufficiently accounted for 639 00:32:56,664 --> 00:32:59,391 in current climate models. 640 00:32:59,425 --> 00:33:00,668 LEE: As permafrost thaws, 641 00:33:00,702 --> 00:33:03,395 greenhouse gases like CO2 and methane 642 00:33:03,429 --> 00:33:07,054 will be released back to the atmosphere much faster. 643 00:33:08,917 --> 00:33:11,472 Warming is causing more warming. 644 00:33:16,477 --> 00:33:19,618 NARRATOR: Due to positive feedback, permafrost emissions 645 00:33:19,652 --> 00:33:22,931 could increase the rate of warming, 646 00:33:22,966 --> 00:33:26,107 compounding the need for humans to reduce their emissions 647 00:33:26,142 --> 00:33:29,731 if climate targets are to be met. 648 00:33:32,148 --> 00:33:35,461 But permafrost carbon isn't the only potential driver 649 00:33:35,496 --> 00:33:38,775 of a positive feedback cycle. 650 00:33:42,641 --> 00:33:44,988 Permafrost is actually not the largest carbon reserve 651 00:33:45,023 --> 00:33:46,576 on Earth. 652 00:33:46,610 --> 00:33:48,923 There's much larger carbon reserve 653 00:33:48,957 --> 00:33:51,408 in Earth's crust as fossil carbon. 654 00:33:51,443 --> 00:33:55,378 But we often don't talk about this carbon. 655 00:33:55,412 --> 00:34:00,383 This is because this carbon is considered very stable. 656 00:34:02,764 --> 00:34:04,180 NARRATOR: But some scientists 657 00:34:04,214 --> 00:34:07,942 now wonder if this mega source of carbon 658 00:34:07,976 --> 00:34:10,945 is as stable as they thought. 659 00:34:10,979 --> 00:34:12,257 Disturbing evidence 660 00:34:12,291 --> 00:34:16,364 comes from the bubbles in Esieh Lake. 661 00:34:18,573 --> 00:34:20,575 Methane released by thawing permafrost 662 00:34:20,610 --> 00:34:22,957 has a particular chemical fingerprint. 663 00:34:22,991 --> 00:34:25,718 When the scientists at Esieh Lake 664 00:34:25,753 --> 00:34:27,444 studied the methane in the bubbles, 665 00:34:27,479 --> 00:34:31,552 they discovered it originated deeper inside Earth. 666 00:34:31,586 --> 00:34:34,865 Much deeper. 667 00:34:34,900 --> 00:34:37,385 ♪ 668 00:34:37,420 --> 00:34:40,664 Miles beneath the permafrost, deep in Earth's crust, 669 00:34:40,699 --> 00:34:45,462 lie huge fossil methane reservoirs. 670 00:34:45,497 --> 00:34:47,188 While methane from permafrost 671 00:34:47,223 --> 00:34:50,295 comes from organic matter thousands of years old, 672 00:34:50,329 --> 00:34:52,331 fossil methane comes from organisms 673 00:34:52,366 --> 00:34:57,025 that decomposed millions of years ago. 674 00:34:57,060 --> 00:34:59,200 But if it's miles beneath the surface, 675 00:34:59,235 --> 00:35:02,721 how is this methane getting through Earth's crust? 676 00:35:02,755 --> 00:35:04,274 And why here? 677 00:35:07,415 --> 00:35:09,279 Above ground, 678 00:35:09,314 --> 00:35:13,145 the landscape itself gives scientists a clue. 679 00:35:13,180 --> 00:35:14,802 SULLIVAN: Looking up at the peaks around here, 680 00:35:14,836 --> 00:35:17,149 and studying the local geology, 681 00:35:17,184 --> 00:35:18,909 we know that this is 682 00:35:18,944 --> 00:35:21,015 a highly fractured and faulted region. 683 00:35:25,088 --> 00:35:27,849 NARRATOR: As of 2021, Alaska is the most 684 00:35:27,884 --> 00:35:32,992 seismically active state in the U.S. 685 00:35:33,027 --> 00:35:35,961 In the territory close to Esieh Lake, 686 00:35:35,995 --> 00:35:37,928 scientists have discovered a network 687 00:35:37,963 --> 00:35:41,173 of geological fault lines. 688 00:35:41,208 --> 00:35:43,865 Although not on a tectonic plate boundary, 689 00:35:43,900 --> 00:35:47,835 movements of Earth's crust have caused it to crack here. 690 00:35:47,869 --> 00:35:51,563 The closest fault line discovered so far 691 00:35:51,597 --> 00:35:55,463 is fewer than five miles from the lake. 692 00:35:57,293 --> 00:35:59,364 Fault lines make cracks in Earth's crust 693 00:35:59,398 --> 00:36:04,058 through which fossil methane can rise to the surface. 694 00:36:04,092 --> 00:36:05,715 Though it hasn't been confirmed, 695 00:36:05,749 --> 00:36:08,787 the scientists suspect a fault line lies near, 696 00:36:08,821 --> 00:36:11,721 or directly beneath, Esieh Lake. 697 00:36:11,755 --> 00:36:15,276 But if so, there's a mystery. 698 00:36:15,311 --> 00:36:17,520 Seismic evidence from the area suggests 699 00:36:17,554 --> 00:36:23,595 Esieh Lake sits above 500 feet of still-frozen permafrost. 700 00:36:23,629 --> 00:36:26,874 This should form a rock-solid frozen barrier 701 00:36:26,908 --> 00:36:30,636 trapping the fossil methane inside Earth. 702 00:36:32,845 --> 00:36:35,400 So how are these deep stocks of greenhouse gas 703 00:36:35,434 --> 00:36:38,920 breaking through to the surface? 704 00:36:40,819 --> 00:36:42,924 So far, the team's sonar scan 705 00:36:42,959 --> 00:36:47,412 has revealed a 50-foot hole in the lake floor. 706 00:36:47,446 --> 00:36:50,587 But what if they could look deeper, 707 00:36:50,622 --> 00:36:54,039 into the permafrost itself? 708 00:36:54,073 --> 00:36:55,765 Geophysicist Nick Hasson 709 00:36:55,799 --> 00:36:59,009 joins the team, with technology used 710 00:36:59,044 --> 00:37:01,667 by the military. 711 00:37:01,702 --> 00:37:03,807 75 just after the shrub. 712 00:37:03,842 --> 00:37:08,778 HASSON: I'm essentially scanning the permafrost 713 00:37:08,812 --> 00:37:10,780 using a geophysical method called Very Low Frequency. 714 00:37:10,814 --> 00:37:15,025 NARRATOR: Very Low Frequency, or VLF, 715 00:37:15,060 --> 00:37:18,443 measures a special kind of electromagnetic wave 716 00:37:18,477 --> 00:37:21,342 as it moves through Earth. 717 00:37:21,377 --> 00:37:23,827 These waves are sent out globally by the Navy 718 00:37:23,862 --> 00:37:27,245 to communicate with submarines. 719 00:37:27,279 --> 00:37:31,110 But as those waves pass through the Earth below, 720 00:37:31,145 --> 00:37:33,699 Hasson's equipment can pick them up. 721 00:37:33,734 --> 00:37:37,634 By measuring the speed the wave travels, 722 00:37:37,669 --> 00:37:39,153 Hasson can tell whether the ground deep beneath him 723 00:37:39,187 --> 00:37:42,432 is frozen or not. 724 00:37:42,467 --> 00:37:43,778 When it moves through the ground, 725 00:37:43,813 --> 00:37:46,056 if there's permafrost or ice, 726 00:37:46,091 --> 00:37:49,370 these waves are coming up against 727 00:37:49,405 --> 00:37:51,234 a lot of resistance. 728 00:37:51,269 --> 00:37:53,305 But if there's no permafrost or ice, 729 00:37:53,340 --> 00:37:56,998 it quickly moves through. 730 00:37:57,033 --> 00:37:58,448 NARRATOR: If they're strong enough, 731 00:37:58,483 --> 00:38:00,381 the electromagnetic VLF waves 732 00:38:00,416 --> 00:38:05,697 should enable Hasson to see whatever lies beneath the lake. 733 00:38:05,731 --> 00:38:08,665 And so we can scan the Earth similar to how a doctor 734 00:38:08,700 --> 00:38:10,218 scans you with a MRI. 735 00:38:12,082 --> 00:38:13,912 NARRATOR: Esieh Lake is the biggest 736 00:38:13,946 --> 00:38:16,708 on-land methane seep yet found in the Arctic, 737 00:38:16,742 --> 00:38:20,436 but no one has used VLF to look beneath it. 738 00:38:22,369 --> 00:38:24,060 Until now. 739 00:38:24,094 --> 00:38:25,061 HASSON: Wow. 740 00:38:25,095 --> 00:38:27,477 Fantastic signals. 741 00:38:27,512 --> 00:38:30,169 Yeah, so I'm starting to notice a change. 742 00:38:34,726 --> 00:38:37,038 Well, we're over the largest seep, 743 00:38:37,073 --> 00:38:39,420 and there's some sort of large anomaly 744 00:38:39,455 --> 00:38:41,802 happening right here where I'm located. 745 00:38:41,836 --> 00:38:44,425 And the VLF is picking it up. 746 00:38:44,460 --> 00:38:46,220 It's very exciting. 747 00:38:46,254 --> 00:38:48,636 The signals are just outstanding. 748 00:38:48,671 --> 00:38:51,777 ♪ 749 00:38:53,400 --> 00:38:54,849 NARRATOR: Back at camp, 750 00:38:54,884 --> 00:38:57,611 Hasson takes the first ever high-resolution glimpse 751 00:38:57,645 --> 00:38:59,958 beneath Esieh Lake. 752 00:39:02,098 --> 00:39:05,273 This slice through 500 feet of ground below the lake 753 00:39:05,308 --> 00:39:08,622 reveals an anomaly. 754 00:39:08,656 --> 00:39:11,694 So the dark blue is the permafrost region. 755 00:39:11,728 --> 00:39:17,009 So anything that's light blue to red is thawed. 756 00:39:17,044 --> 00:39:19,149 And so this shouldn't be here. 757 00:39:19,184 --> 00:39:23,188 There should be permafrost covering this entire area. 758 00:39:23,222 --> 00:39:24,465 But for some reason, 759 00:39:24,500 --> 00:39:27,882 what you can see here is a thaw chimney 760 00:39:27,917 --> 00:39:32,266 going from somewhere below 150 meters 761 00:39:32,300 --> 00:39:34,717 to the surface, 762 00:39:34,751 --> 00:39:37,547 where we see the rising bubbles. 763 00:39:37,582 --> 00:39:40,067 And so this is really unique. 764 00:39:41,517 --> 00:39:43,484 NARRATOR: So far, the scientists have only seen 765 00:39:43,519 --> 00:39:46,453 50 feet beneath the lake. 766 00:39:46,487 --> 00:39:50,974 Now, Hasson's VLF image lets them look ten times deeper. 767 00:39:53,321 --> 00:39:57,671 Below the lake stretches a deep layer of permafrost. 768 00:39:57,705 --> 00:39:59,431 But the scientists now know 769 00:39:59,466 --> 00:40:02,572 this hasn't just thawed at the surface. 770 00:40:02,607 --> 00:40:05,610 Instead, a chimney of material has thawed 771 00:40:05,644 --> 00:40:09,441 right through the frozen permafrost: 772 00:40:09,476 --> 00:40:11,719 a warmer, semi-permeable passageway 773 00:40:11,754 --> 00:40:15,585 through which fossil methane rises to the surface. 774 00:40:20,348 --> 00:40:22,661 So, thawing permafrost means not one, 775 00:40:22,696 --> 00:40:26,354 but two sources of methane for our atmosphere. 776 00:40:26,389 --> 00:40:28,529 As it warms, 777 00:40:28,564 --> 00:40:31,739 permafrost releases its own methane gas. 778 00:40:31,774 --> 00:40:34,846 And as thaw chimneys form within it, 779 00:40:34,880 --> 00:40:37,573 they provide an escape route for fossil methane 780 00:40:37,607 --> 00:40:40,541 that has been safely trapped for millions of years. 781 00:40:44,580 --> 00:40:48,894 Scientists estimate there are around 1.3 trillion tons 782 00:40:48,929 --> 00:40:51,276 of methane stored beneath the Arctic. 783 00:40:52,726 --> 00:40:55,763 That's nearly 250 times as much methane 784 00:40:55,798 --> 00:40:59,249 as there is in Earth's atmosphere today. 785 00:40:59,284 --> 00:41:03,012 So is Esieh Lake's thaw chimney unique? 786 00:41:03,046 --> 00:41:05,463 Or is fossil methane escaping elsewhere? 787 00:41:07,326 --> 00:41:10,088 While the leak in Esieh Lake is unusually large, 788 00:41:10,122 --> 00:41:11,986 smaller seeps of fossil methane 789 00:41:12,021 --> 00:41:14,817 are being discovered across the Arctic. 790 00:41:16,646 --> 00:41:20,029 In Alaska alone, over 70 sites have been found. 791 00:41:20,063 --> 00:41:22,169 ♪ 792 00:41:23,653 --> 00:41:26,000 There's no current sign the entire reserve 793 00:41:26,035 --> 00:41:28,589 of fossil methane is moving toward the surface. 794 00:41:28,624 --> 00:41:32,317 But the appearance of even small amounts 795 00:41:32,351 --> 00:41:37,495 of this ancient greenhouse gas has some scientists concerned. 796 00:41:37,529 --> 00:41:39,738 WALTER ANTHONY: If permafrost thawed, 797 00:41:39,773 --> 00:41:43,224 then that's a scary wildcard in the climate change story, 798 00:41:43,259 --> 00:41:44,881 because we think there's a huge amount 799 00:41:44,916 --> 00:41:46,262 of methane and natural gas 800 00:41:46,296 --> 00:41:48,851 trapped inside permafrost and under permafrost. 801 00:41:48,885 --> 00:41:50,922 So if permafrost becomes like Swiss cheese, 802 00:41:50,956 --> 00:41:53,372 with lots of holes in it, 803 00:41:53,407 --> 00:41:57,100 then you can have chimneys where that gas is erupting out. 804 00:41:57,135 --> 00:41:59,724 And that is not included in climate models. 805 00:41:59,758 --> 00:42:01,726 ♪ 806 00:42:01,760 --> 00:42:03,382 NARRATOR: If only a tiny fraction 807 00:42:03,417 --> 00:42:06,524 of the fossil reservoirs were to reach the atmosphere, 808 00:42:06,558 --> 00:42:08,940 it could intensify warming, 809 00:42:08,974 --> 00:42:13,461 putting even more pressure on human emissions targets. 810 00:42:13,496 --> 00:42:15,222 How fast that's going to happen 811 00:42:15,256 --> 00:42:18,708 and just how much methane will come out, we don't know. 812 00:42:22,885 --> 00:42:25,232 NARRATOR: Scientists don't currently understand 813 00:42:25,266 --> 00:42:27,821 how fast such a cycle might occur, 814 00:42:27,855 --> 00:42:30,340 or what it would look like. 815 00:42:32,757 --> 00:42:34,068 But there's one place on Earth 816 00:42:34,103 --> 00:42:35,725 that gives a chilling example 817 00:42:35,760 --> 00:42:40,558 of how a human-made permafrost feedback cycle actually works. 818 00:42:42,629 --> 00:42:46,840 Northeast Siberia is home to the Chersky Mountains. 819 00:42:49,118 --> 00:42:52,397 In the 1960s, in a place called Batagaika, 820 00:42:52,431 --> 00:42:56,574 a stretch of forest was cleared to make a road. 821 00:42:56,608 --> 00:42:59,922 Stripped of its tree cover, 822 00:42:59,956 --> 00:43:03,650 the permafrost was exposed to the warming sun. 823 00:43:03,684 --> 00:43:05,237 As it thawed, the ground sank, 824 00:43:05,272 --> 00:43:11,485 pulling down trees at its edge and exposing more permafrost: 825 00:43:11,519 --> 00:43:13,452 a positive feedback cycle. 826 00:43:13,487 --> 00:43:16,317 ♪ 827 00:43:16,352 --> 00:43:18,457 Today, the strip of cleared forest 828 00:43:18,492 --> 00:43:21,978 is a depression nearly 300 feet deep 829 00:43:22,013 --> 00:43:23,980 and over half a mile wide. 830 00:43:24,015 --> 00:43:25,810 And it's growing. 831 00:43:25,844 --> 00:43:28,709 Scientists call it a megaslump. 832 00:43:28,744 --> 00:43:30,815 LEIBMAN: Batagaika, 833 00:43:30,849 --> 00:43:32,437 it is very big, 834 00:43:32,471 --> 00:43:38,201 but this, the size is because of the initial human impact. 835 00:43:38,236 --> 00:43:40,894 And this one is already more than one kilometer, 836 00:43:40,928 --> 00:43:42,861 and growing every summer. 837 00:43:46,796 --> 00:43:49,937 NARRATOR: Batagaika reveals how a small human impact 838 00:43:49,972 --> 00:43:54,079 can start a devastating feedback cycle in permafrost. 839 00:43:55,563 --> 00:43:57,911 [birds chirping] 840 00:43:57,945 --> 00:43:59,637 Scientists are now trying to discover 841 00:43:59,671 --> 00:44:00,879 what a feedback cycle 842 00:44:00,914 --> 00:44:03,641 could mean for the entire permafrost region 843 00:44:03,675 --> 00:44:07,299 and whether it could reach a point where it becomes 844 00:44:07,334 --> 00:44:09,992 irreversible. 845 00:44:10,026 --> 00:44:12,857 Such a phenomenon is called a tipping point. 846 00:44:12,891 --> 00:44:14,375 SULLIVAN: A tipping point is 847 00:44:14,410 --> 00:44:18,276 the proverbial straw that broke the camel's back. 848 00:44:18,310 --> 00:44:20,692 You can get away with adding straw for so long, 849 00:44:20,727 --> 00:44:23,039 and then you can't. 850 00:44:23,074 --> 00:44:26,905 And the tipping point is the point of no return. 851 00:44:26,940 --> 00:44:29,321 ♪ 852 00:44:29,356 --> 00:44:32,808 NARRATOR: It's a controversial idea among climate scientists. 853 00:44:32,842 --> 00:44:34,361 But the prospect of a tipping point 854 00:44:34,395 --> 00:44:37,709 has been raised for a number of global climate systems, 855 00:44:37,744 --> 00:44:40,332 including Arctic sea ice 856 00:44:40,367 --> 00:44:43,508 and deforestation in the Amazon. 857 00:44:43,542 --> 00:44:45,717 So far, there's no conclusive evidence 858 00:44:45,752 --> 00:44:50,411 that a tipping point is near for permafrost. 859 00:44:50,446 --> 00:44:53,967 However, some scientists believe aspects of the thaw 860 00:44:54,001 --> 00:44:56,348 are now irreversible. 861 00:44:56,383 --> 00:44:57,971 [ground squelching] 862 00:44:58,005 --> 00:45:01,906 Vladimir Romanovsky has spent decades studying 863 00:45:01,940 --> 00:45:03,839 the changing permafrost. 864 00:45:06,220 --> 00:45:08,360 Near Utqiagvik in Northern Alaska, 865 00:45:08,395 --> 00:45:09,637 he investigates 866 00:45:09,672 --> 00:45:12,019 what happens as large wedges of ice in the ground 867 00:45:12,054 --> 00:45:14,194 start to melt. 868 00:45:14,228 --> 00:45:15,195 ROMANOVSKY: Before, 869 00:45:15,229 --> 00:45:17,335 it was more or less flat area, 870 00:45:17,369 --> 00:45:19,509 but then ice melts 871 00:45:19,544 --> 00:45:21,477 and surface subsides. 872 00:45:23,721 --> 00:45:24,756 NARRATOR: Romanovsky believes 873 00:45:24,791 --> 00:45:27,379 lakes formed by melting permafrost ice 874 00:45:27,414 --> 00:45:31,418 have passed a point of no return. 875 00:45:31,452 --> 00:45:33,765 ROMANOVSKY: It took tens of thousands of years 876 00:45:33,800 --> 00:45:35,767 to put this ice into the ground. 877 00:45:35,802 --> 00:45:37,079 Now, it's, it's melting. 878 00:45:37,113 --> 00:45:39,771 To put all this ice into the ground back, 879 00:45:39,806 --> 00:45:42,394 you will need several tens of thousands of years. 880 00:45:42,429 --> 00:45:46,088 So that's, for humans, definitely irreversible process. 881 00:45:46,122 --> 00:45:50,230 It is tipping point. 882 00:45:50,264 --> 00:45:54,096 NARRATOR: While melting ice forms lakes in the wilderness, 883 00:45:54,130 --> 00:45:58,031 just a few miles away, it's causing very different problems 884 00:45:58,065 --> 00:46:00,792 for the local community. 885 00:46:00,827 --> 00:46:04,934 In the roads outside Utqiagvik, 886 00:46:04,969 --> 00:46:06,315 the effects of rising Arctic temperatures 887 00:46:06,349 --> 00:46:08,041 are easy to see. 888 00:46:08,075 --> 00:46:11,285 NELSON: Just from observation, growing up here, 889 00:46:11,320 --> 00:46:14,116 coming out here since I was a kid, 890 00:46:14,150 --> 00:46:18,327 the roads were a lot higher than they are now. 891 00:46:20,398 --> 00:46:23,711 It is literally sinking. 892 00:46:23,746 --> 00:46:25,852 His bumper might get wet. 893 00:46:25,886 --> 00:46:28,682 NARRATOR: Native Alaskan Inupiaq Lars Nelson 894 00:46:28,716 --> 00:46:30,442 is an infrastructure consultant. 895 00:46:30,477 --> 00:46:32,168 He knows firsthand 896 00:46:32,203 --> 00:46:36,000 what permafrost thaw is doing to his community. 897 00:46:36,034 --> 00:46:39,417 NELSON: This road is for subsistence use; 898 00:46:39,451 --> 00:46:42,592 we come out here and stage our hunts. 899 00:46:42,627 --> 00:46:46,838 It's a big part of our history, and it's important that 900 00:46:46,873 --> 00:46:48,978 we're able to access it in case of an emergency. 901 00:46:50,773 --> 00:46:53,811 NARRATOR: And it's not just the roads that are sinking. 902 00:46:53,845 --> 00:46:55,985 In downtown Utqiagvik, 903 00:46:56,020 --> 00:46:59,678 Nelson meets Inupiaq Anthony Edwardsen. 904 00:46:59,713 --> 00:47:01,508 These ones are subsiding, too. 905 00:47:01,542 --> 00:47:02,992 Yeah. 906 00:47:03,027 --> 00:47:05,201 NARRATOR: He's an expert on the Inupiaq community 907 00:47:05,236 --> 00:47:08,515 with four decades' experience in the construction industry. 908 00:47:08,549 --> 00:47:10,137 Yeah, look at... this one is really messed up. 909 00:47:10,172 --> 00:47:11,414 Look at how it's just... 910 00:47:11,449 --> 00:47:15,349 EDWARDSEN: That's where the houses are sinking. 911 00:47:15,384 --> 00:47:19,353 NARRATOR: Local houses are built on wooden pilings. 912 00:47:19,388 --> 00:47:20,354 If they were built on the ground, 913 00:47:20,389 --> 00:47:22,770 the heat used to warm the homes 914 00:47:22,805 --> 00:47:24,565 would thaw the permafrost below. 915 00:47:24,600 --> 00:47:28,121 But now the permafrost is thawing by itself, 916 00:47:28,155 --> 00:47:33,022 and the pilings are starting to sink. 917 00:47:33,057 --> 00:47:36,060 EDWARDSEN: When the piling is a very small base, 918 00:47:36,094 --> 00:47:38,648 it doesn't hold its structure. 919 00:47:38,683 --> 00:47:40,409 The communities, 920 00:47:40,443 --> 00:47:42,583 they need the house leveling, 921 00:47:42,618 --> 00:47:45,448 move houses, houses need to be torn down. 922 00:47:45,483 --> 00:47:47,865 We're in the middle of a housing crisis. 923 00:47:49,590 --> 00:47:51,661 NARRATOR: Nelson believes 924 00:47:51,696 --> 00:47:53,905 strategic building is the answer. 925 00:47:53,940 --> 00:47:55,424 We're on to it right now, 926 00:47:55,458 --> 00:47:56,666 and we're refining it right now. 927 00:47:56,701 --> 00:47:58,772 We can build nice, good, healthy homes. 928 00:47:58,806 --> 00:48:01,809 We just got to pay attention to our foundation, 929 00:48:01,844 --> 00:48:04,951 pay attention to the tundra we're building on more closely. 930 00:48:04,985 --> 00:48:08,230 Because it's such an awesome spot, you know? 931 00:48:08,264 --> 00:48:09,714 It's the top of the world. 932 00:48:09,748 --> 00:48:13,752 ♪ 933 00:48:13,787 --> 00:48:16,376 NARRATOR: But as the permafrost continues to thaw, 934 00:48:16,410 --> 00:48:20,380 others in Alaska are looking at more drastic solutions. 935 00:48:20,414 --> 00:48:24,660 GRIFFIN HAGLE: So this is our portable, adjustable, 936 00:48:24,694 --> 00:48:26,144 sled-base home. 937 00:48:26,179 --> 00:48:29,803 It is on a giant steel sled, 938 00:48:29,837 --> 00:48:33,151 as opposed to the pilings. 939 00:48:33,186 --> 00:48:37,328 NARRATOR: C.E.O. of the regional housing authority Griffin Hagle 940 00:48:37,362 --> 00:48:39,537 has a more radical plan for sinking homes. 941 00:48:41,470 --> 00:48:44,714 HAGLE: What we would do if we needed to, to move this, 942 00:48:44,749 --> 00:48:47,338 we would be hooking up our tow chains 943 00:48:47,372 --> 00:48:49,374 to these two attachment points. 944 00:48:49,409 --> 00:48:50,789 We've got one on this side 945 00:48:50,824 --> 00:48:53,275 and one on that corner of the building over there. 946 00:48:53,309 --> 00:48:56,036 Hook that up to a piece of heavy equipment, Caterpillar, 947 00:48:56,071 --> 00:48:59,177 and then drop it off the pads 948 00:48:59,212 --> 00:49:01,076 and basically tow it across the snow 949 00:49:01,110 --> 00:49:02,732 in the wintertime. 950 00:49:02,767 --> 00:49:05,839 ♪ 951 00:49:08,497 --> 00:49:09,877 NARRATOR: As temperatures rise, 952 00:49:09,912 --> 00:49:11,914 Hagle is searching for ways 953 00:49:11,949 --> 00:49:14,261 to protect some of the most isolated communities 954 00:49:14,296 --> 00:49:16,539 in the United States. 955 00:49:16,574 --> 00:49:17,851 HAGLE: This is the largest 956 00:49:17,885 --> 00:49:19,818 municipality in the world, I think, by land area. 957 00:49:19,853 --> 00:49:22,442 We provide affordable housing 958 00:49:22,476 --> 00:49:25,997 in eight villages across an area the size of Minnesota, 959 00:49:26,032 --> 00:49:27,516 only without any roads. 960 00:49:29,276 --> 00:49:31,761 NARRATOR: No Alaskan homes have been sledded away, 961 00:49:31,796 --> 00:49:33,625 yet. 962 00:49:33,660 --> 00:49:37,871 But Arctic warming has forced some towns to relocate. 963 00:49:37,905 --> 00:49:42,462 And Hagle thinks houses will soon be on the move. 964 00:49:42,496 --> 00:49:44,188 And there are several, you know, communities, 965 00:49:44,222 --> 00:49:46,362 especially in rural Alaska, Native communities, 966 00:49:46,397 --> 00:49:49,020 that are increasingly at risk of relocation 967 00:49:49,055 --> 00:49:51,126 due to global warming. 968 00:49:51,160 --> 00:49:52,920 And so this gives us an advantage 969 00:49:52,955 --> 00:49:55,820 in having the option, the adaptability, 970 00:49:55,854 --> 00:50:00,031 to move that, that structure if it becomes necessary. 971 00:50:00,066 --> 00:50:02,792 Native people, the Indigenous communities 972 00:50:02,827 --> 00:50:05,002 that have called this place home for thousands of years, 973 00:50:05,036 --> 00:50:06,727 have come up with all sorts of innovations 974 00:50:06,762 --> 00:50:08,177 to make life work here. 975 00:50:08,212 --> 00:50:10,317 So we draw a lot of inspiration from that, 976 00:50:10,352 --> 00:50:11,560 and we see that as kind of the continuation 977 00:50:11,594 --> 00:50:14,873 of a long, long tradition of innovation. 978 00:50:17,359 --> 00:50:20,362 ♪ 979 00:50:21,846 --> 00:50:24,331 NARRATOR: As inhabitants across the Arctic 980 00:50:24,366 --> 00:50:26,747 adapt to their changing world, 981 00:50:26,782 --> 00:50:30,303 scientists strive to build a better picture 982 00:50:30,337 --> 00:50:32,753 of our climate future. 983 00:50:32,788 --> 00:50:36,240 The methane craters are just one sign of 984 00:50:36,274 --> 00:50:38,414 a region undergoing unprecedented changes... 985 00:50:41,348 --> 00:50:44,144 ...placing communities with deep ties to this land 986 00:50:44,179 --> 00:50:45,801 at risk. 987 00:50:45,835 --> 00:50:47,941 BROWER: We've been whaling here 988 00:50:47,975 --> 00:50:49,632 well over 4,000 years. 989 00:50:49,667 --> 00:50:51,945 [birds cawing] 990 00:50:51,979 --> 00:50:56,122 We've adapted time and time again. 991 00:50:56,156 --> 00:50:58,227 Today, we might not be able to do it by ourselves. 992 00:50:59,918 --> 00:51:04,475 NARRATOR: But the big thaw is not just a regional problem. 993 00:51:04,509 --> 00:51:07,581 What's happening in the Arctic could really affect 994 00:51:07,616 --> 00:51:10,032 everyone on Earth. 995 00:51:10,067 --> 00:51:11,654 NARRATOR: Arctic greenhouse gases 996 00:51:11,689 --> 00:51:13,691 will intensify future global warming. 997 00:51:13,725 --> 00:51:18,385 How quickly is difficult to predict. 998 00:51:18,420 --> 00:51:20,525 And positive feedback cycles 999 00:51:20,560 --> 00:51:23,080 could accelerate beyond human control, 1000 00:51:23,114 --> 00:51:27,636 making our choices today even more urgent. 1001 00:51:27,670 --> 00:51:31,018 LEE: Because it's very difficult to take control 1002 00:51:31,053 --> 00:51:34,539 over the natural systems, 1003 00:51:34,574 --> 00:51:38,233 it's even more important for us to lower our emissions. 1004 00:51:40,235 --> 00:51:41,719 NATALI: These craters are 1005 00:51:41,753 --> 00:51:44,446 a really important and concerning indicator 1006 00:51:44,480 --> 00:51:47,483 that things are changing, and the Arctic is melting, 1007 00:51:47,518 --> 00:51:48,933 and the Arctic is thawing. 1008 00:51:48,967 --> 00:51:50,762 And the future of the Arctic 1009 00:51:50,797 --> 00:51:52,764 is a very different place than it was 1010 00:51:52,799 --> 00:51:54,249 several decades ago. 1011 00:51:54,283 --> 00:51:57,217 ♪ 76453

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