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Viewers like you make
this program possible.
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Support your local PBS station.
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♪
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NARRATOR: What happens when a
frozen world locked away for millennia
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starts to thaw?
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In 2014, a helicopter crew
flying over Siberia
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discovers something mysterious:
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a crater more than 80 feet wide
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and deeper than a 15-story building.
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Sinkholes are nothing new,
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but this is no ordinary sinkhole.
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SUSAN NATALI:
The ground has exploded.
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There's no way...
this is not real.
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NARRATOR: More Siberian
craters have since been discovered.
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There's even evidence
they may be appearing in Alaska.
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TAYLOR SULLIVAN:
The lake bottom went from being
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flat, flat, flat,
and then it just dropped out.
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NARRATOR: And they
show no sign of stopping.
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Now, scientists from around
the globe race to understand
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a hidden world:
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permafrost, a layer of frozen earth
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spanning a quarter of the
Northern Hemisphere's land mass.
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This ancient freezer is beginning to thaw,
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revealing its deepest secrets...
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Pretty exciting, this is a
mammoth bone right here.
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NARRATOR:...releasing over half a billion
tons of carbon every year...
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JANELLE SHARP: It was
just insane, like, the water
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is boiling around you.
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NARRATOR:...and threatening local
communities.
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LARS NELSON:
Houses need to be torn down.
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We're in the middle of a housing crisis.
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♪
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NARRATOR: Are the craters
warning shots for our climate future?
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KATEY WALTER ANTHONY:
That is not included in climate models.
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That's a scary wildcard
in the climate change story.
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NARRATOR:
What new dangers lurk beneath
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this vast frozen landscape?
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And could they warm our planet
even further?
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"Arctic Sinkholes."
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Right now, on "NOVA."
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♪
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[wildlife chirping, chittering]
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NARRATOR:
The Yamal peninsula, Siberia.
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47,000 square miles of freezing tundra.
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♪
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Located in Northern Russia,
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the Yamal lies well above
the Arctic Circle.
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It's home to around 10,000
Indigenous Nenet people,
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most living as nomadic reindeer herders.
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♪
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In their language,
Yamal means "end of the land."
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It's now beginning to look like it.
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♪
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Giant craters were spotted
in the North of Russia.
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They popped up out of nowhere
in the Yamal peninsula.
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NATALI: When I first heard
about the crater, I didn't believe it.
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I actually thought it was a made-up story.
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♪
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MARINA LEIBMAN: Believe
me, I remember this date,
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and I will remember it forever,
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because it was absolutely exciting,
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something I have never seen before.
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NARRATOR: The mysterious
crater is 150 feet deep.
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Filled up with rainwater,
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its volume is greater than
ten Olympic swimming pools.
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The striking images go viral worldwide
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because no one can answer, what caused it?
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♪
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Vasily Bogoyavlensky is an expert
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on the geology of the Yamal.
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With other scientists,
he choppers out to the scene.
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♪
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BOGOYAVLENSKY: When we
just came to this crater, of course,
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we didn't know for sure what was there.
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We never saw something like that, never.
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♪
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NARRATOR: This isn't the
first massive pit to open up.
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[people crying out]
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♪
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Across the world, gaping sinkholes
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have appeared due to water
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or erosion weakening the ground beneath,
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swallowing cars whole
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and wreaking havoc in towns and cities.
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But while the Yamal crater looks at first
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like an ordinary sinkhole,
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there's something unusual
visible around the edges.
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[Bogoyavlensky speaking Russian]
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♪
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NARRATOR: Most sinkholes
have a rim that is flat, not raised.
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And while sinkholes collapse inwards,
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the team discovers debris
spread far outside the crater.
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Pieces of rocks and ice are flying,
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sometimes in quite long distance,
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from 200 meters to 500 meters.
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And in one case,
it was distance to 900 meters.
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NARRATOR:
Debris like this
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can be thrown out by the impact
of an asteroid.
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But there are no other signs
of a massive object
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striking Earth.
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For the scientists, that leaves only one
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reasonable explanation.
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A gigantic natural explosion.
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NATALI:
I don't know if there are many
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Earth system processes
that have never occurred...
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I mean, in my lifetime,
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or at least to scientific understanding...
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that have never occurred
and that we're starting to see
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as a new process.
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NARRATOR: So what could have provided
the power for such a massive blast?
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There is no sign of lava or volcanic rock,
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so this clearly isn't a volcano.
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But exploring inside the crater,
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sampling the air and water at the bottom,
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the scientists do discover
an intriguing clue:
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unusually high levels
of a single gas, methane.
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♪
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Used for cooking and heating,
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methane is a flammable gas
made from carbon and hydrogen.
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[exploding]
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When combined with air, it ignites easily.
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♪
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BOGOYAVLENSKY:
So this is huge bomb.
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Methane bomb.
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NARRATOR: But before
scientists can determine
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where the methane came from...
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...more giant craters
are discovered.
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Investigating, scientists find
new evidence of methane.
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Since 2014,
at least eight confirmed craters
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have been found on or close to the Yamal.
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But the growing number of craters
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isn't the scientists' only concern.
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They notice a climate connection.
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[birds twittering]
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2014, when the first crater appears,
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followed one of the hottest
years on record in Russia.
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And all the craters are
discovered during a period
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of uncharacteristically
warm weather in Siberia.
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Since the late 19th century,
the average global temperature
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has risen around two degrees Fahrenheit.
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But the Arctic is warming faster.
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It's currently heating up
around twice as fast
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as the rest of the planet.
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♪
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The scientists begin to ask:
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could the explosive craters
be connected to climate change?
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If so, what might they be telling us
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about Earth's climate future?
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♪
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While scientists on the Yamal
study the crater,
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elsewhere in the Arctic, another
team is about to discover
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new pieces of the puzzle.
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This time, in Alaska.
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♪
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Kotzebue, near Alaska's northwest coast.
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In 2017, a local pilot reports
a lake that's behaving oddly.
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Now, a team of scientists
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that had been investigating
returns to the site
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to continue its work.
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PHIL HANKE:
So we just left Kotzebue,
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and then we crossed the Kotzebue Sound,
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and into the mouth of the Noatak,
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which was this, like,
beautiful, sweeping landscape.
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SHARP: Look, there's the lake right there!
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Man, that's exciting!
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♪
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NARRATOR: Far from the
nearest town lies Esieh Lake.
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Field technician Phil Hanke
proceeds cautiously,
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hoping to avoid surprises.
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Hey, bear!
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SHARP:
Hey, bear!
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HANKE:
Hey, bear!
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Bear scat.
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Well, there's, uh,
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definitely bears around here,
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so we're going to have to
take that into account
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when setting up camp.
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♪
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NARRATOR: Esieh Lake
is located on the lands of
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the Indigenous Inupiat people.
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The state is home to over
13,000 Inupiaq people,
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whose traditional lands
stretch across Northern Alaska.
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One of the scientists
on the team has special ties
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to this community.
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My name is Janelle Sharp,
my Inupiaq name is Anausuk.
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My mom is originally from Kotzebue.
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My family is from this region.
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And so this project is really
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special to me, because it's kind of, like,
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me coming back to my roots.
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♪
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NARRATOR: In 2017,
Sharp and other scientists
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asked the local community
to help them identify
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unusual features in the wilderness.
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A pilot named Eric Sieh
told them that while flying over
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the area, he'd spotted something unusual.
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♪
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SHARP: If you fly low
enough, even from the air,
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you can see the bubbling.
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♪
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HANKE:
It's just mysterious.
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It looks like a Jacuzzi.
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And so you, you get up to it,
and you can hear this...
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[imitates bubbling]
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Like, the water is boiling around you.
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[water bubbling loudly]
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♪
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NARRATOR: On their first visit,
the team wanted to investigate,
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what's causing the bubbles?
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SHARP:
We took gas samples,
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and then those were sent to
the lab for analysis,
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and they found that it is
a super-high amount of methane.
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NARRATOR:
Methane leaks, known as seeps,
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have been found elsewhere in the Arctic.
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But they're usually much smaller.
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The team's measurements reveal
that Esieh Lake is belching out
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over ten tons of methane every day.
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SULLIVAN:
This is the highest flux
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methane seep that humans
have discovered in the Arctic.
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The amount of methane you see
is staggering.
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♪
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NARRATOR: From the
shore, it's difficult to see
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where the methane is coming from.
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So the team decides
to get closer to the source.
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SULLIVAN: Hypothermia is
obviously the main danger.
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Second is me getting air.
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I'm very curious about what's down there.
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♪
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NARRATOR: Sullivan finds that the
lake is shallow... just a few feet deep.
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But then, he follows the lake floor
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towards the source of the bubbles.
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SULLIVAN:
I was kicking really hard
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to stay down along the bottom,
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and I was moving my hands along it.
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And it went from this mushy lake bottom
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that was flat, flat, flat,
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and then it just dropped out.
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♪
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SULLIVAN:
That gets deep so quickly.
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HANKE: Yeah. It's like you're on
the bottom,
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you're on the bottom, bottom's gone.
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NARRATOR: Sullivan finds the
methane bubbles are streaming up
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from the hole in the lake floor.
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SULLIVAN:
The bubbling,
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it, it sounded like seeping gas,
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as if it was even from a propane tank.
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♪
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HANKE:
How'd it go?
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SULLIVAN:
Still going down! SHARP: Wow.
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[breathing heavily]
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NARRATOR: With the
lake bottom too dark to see,
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the team deploys a sonar scan.
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Most of this bed is around
three feet deep.
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But beneath the streams of bubbles,
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the ground abruptly falls away,
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at its deepest reaching 50 feet.
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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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