Press releases

Coastal erosion in the Arctic intensifies global warming

Sea level rise in the past led to the release of greenhouse gases from permafrost
Vorbereiten des Multicorers auf dem FS Sonne - Von Links: Rolf Winhold (Matrose); Norbert Lensch (Technkiker AWI) und Johannes Ullermann (Doktorand AWI)

Obwohl der Südozean eine Schlüsselstellung im globalen Klimageschehen einnimmt, ist seine größte Region - der Südpazifik - kaum bearbeitet. Das Ziel der SO-213 Ausfahrt in den SE-Pazifik ist es, mit paläozeanographischen Rekonstruktionen die Kenntnisse über die pleistozänen und holozänen Wechselwirkungen zwischen Ozean, Atmosphäre und kontinentalen Eismassen, sowie über die Auslöse- und Übertragungsmechanismen von globalen Klimaänderungen zu verbessern. Insbesondere steht dabei die Lage und Ausdehnung der ozeanischen Frontensysteme (Subantarktische und Subtropische Front, Südpazifische Gyre) mit ihren Auswirkungen auf den atmosphärisch ozeanischen Kohlendioxidaustausch und die Nährstoffverwertung in der ozeanischen Deckschicht im Fokus. Dies soll anhand von Untersuchungen von Bor-Isotopen und B/Ca-Verhältnissen an planktischen Foraminiferen, von Wasseroberflächentemperaturen und Wärmetransfer des Humboldt-Stromes und der Veränderungen in der Zirkulation und Ventilation von Antarktischem Zwischenwasser, zirkumpolarem Antarktischem Tiefenwasser und Pazifischem Zentralwasser, sowie Änderungen in den Karbonatlösungsmustern anhand von geophysikalischen (Reflektionsseismik) und geochemischen Untersuchungen an Sedimentkernen von Sedimentkernen erreicht werden. Weiterhin sollen die ozeanischen Deckschicht in Abhängigkeit von Veränderungen der ozeanischen Fronten rekonstruiert, sowie die Änderungen der Tiefenwasserzirkulation, deren Bildungsgebiete und -phasen und der zeitliche Zusammenhang mit den paläoklimatischen Veränderungen untersucht werden.
Preparing the Multicorer on RV Sonne (Photo: Alfred Wegener Institute / Thomas Ronge)

The loss of arctic permafrost deposits by coastal erosion could amplify climate warming via the greenhouse effect. A study using sediment samples from the Sea of Okhotsk on the eastern coast of Russia led by AWI researchers revealed that the loss of Arctic permafrost at the end of the last glacial period led to repeated sudden increases in the carbon dioxide concentration in the atmosphere.

Today, the exact magnitude of the future increase in greenhouse gas concentrations remains unknown. This is partly due to the fact that carbon dioxide is not only produced by humans burning gas, coal and oil; it can also find its way into the atmosphere as a result of natural environmental processes. The positive feedback between warming and the release of ever increasing amounts of carbon dioxide from natural sources is a particular threat. In order to enable a better assessment of whether, and how, such developments are possible, climate researchers study records from the past to find evidence of these events.

Researchers from the Alfred Wegener Institute Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research (AWI) together with colleagues from Copenhagen and Zurich have now found evidence of this phenomenon for the Arctic permafrost regions. As the authors report in the journal Nature Communications, through their investigations along the coast of the Sea of Okhotsk in eastern Russia, they were able to show that several thousand years ago large quantities of carbon dioxide were released from Arctic permafrost – due to a rapid rise of sea level. Permafrost is ground that remains frozen year round down to depths of up to several hundred metres, some since the last glacial period 20,000 years ago or even longer. Like a giant freezer, permafrost soils preserve huge quantities of dead biomass, mainly plant remains. When the permafrost thaws, bacteria start degrading the ancient biomass, and their metabolisms release the greenhouses gases carbon dioxide and methane.

We now know that about 11,500, 14,600 and 16,500 years ago, significant and sudden rises in the carbon dioxide level in the atmosphere occurred, but the reasons for these three rapid fluctuations remain poorly understood. In order to investigate the causes, a group of researchers led by AWI geologists Dr Maria Winterfeld and Prof Dr Gesine Mollenhauer set off for the Sea of Okhotsk. “Originally we assumed that at the time, the vast Amur River carried tremendous quantities of plant material from the hinterland, which microorganisms in the water then broke down into carbon dioxide. So we collected sediment samples from the sea floor, which we then analysed.” The findings were surprising: deep in the sediment, the researchers found evidence of plant remains that had been deposited on the sea floor. These were several thousand years older than the surrounding deposits, which made it clear that they must have originated in extremely old permafrost that for some reason had suddenly thawed. Particularly large amounts of these plant remains were washed into the sea 11,500, 14,600 and 16,500 years ago. But the Amur’s discharge rate was not significantly higher at those times.

Gesine Mollenhauer and her team found the solution to this puzzle when they looked at the changes in sea level since the last glacial period. About 11,500 and 14,600 years ago, particularly intense melting of the ice-sheets led to what are known as meltwater pulses – and each time the sea level rose by up to 20 metres within a few centuries. “We assume that this resulted in severe erosion of the permafrost coast in the Sea of Okhotsk and the North Pacific – a phenomenon that we can observe in the Arctic today.” This allowed large amounts of several-thousand-year-old plant remains to enter the ocean, some of which were broken down into carbon dioxide by bacteria or deposited in the ocean floor.

To determine whether such permafrost erosion could indeed have been a key factor in increases in the global carbon dioxide concentration, AWI colleague Dr Peter Köhler used a computer model to simulate the global carbon cycle. By estimating the area of permafrost lost to the sea at the time, he obtained data on the likely amount of carbon dioxide released. The results are eye opening: 11,500 and 14,600 years ago, erosion of Arctic permafrost probably contributed to about 50 percent of the carbon dioxide increase, and 16,500 years ago to about a quarter.

The AWI team has thus revealed a process that could become reality in the future. Today the Arctic’s permafrost coast is eroding severely because the region is warming rapidly – in some places the coast is receding at a rate of 20 metres per year. As Gesine Mollenhauer explains: “Our findings show that this coastal erosion is an important process, but to date it has not been sufficiently considered in climate models. Such effects need to be included in future models.”

 

Original publication

Maria Winterfeld, Gesine Mollenhauer, Wolf Dummann, Peter Köhler, Lester Lembke-Jene, Vera D. Meyer, Jens Hefter, Cameron McIntyre, Lukas Wacker, Ulla Kokfelt, Ralf Tiedemann: Deglacial mobilization of pre-aged terrestrial carbon from degrading permafrost. Nature Communications (2018), DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-06080-w

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Science

Gesine Mollenhauer
+49(471)4831-2456

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Peter Köhler
+49(471)4831-2770

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Vorbereiten des Multicorers auf dem FS Sonne - Von Links: Rolf Winhold (Matrose); Norbert Lensch (Technkiker AWI) und Johannes Ullermann (Doktorand AWI)

Obwohl der Südozean eine Schlüsselstellung im globalen Klimageschehen einnimmt, ist seine größte Region - der Südpazifik - kaum bearbeitet. Das Ziel der SO-213 Ausfahrt in den SE-Pazifik ist es, mit paläozeanographischen Rekonstruktionen die Kenntnisse über die pleistozänen und holozänen Wechselwirkungen zwischen Ozean, Atmosphäre und kontinentalen Eismassen, sowie über die Auslöse- und Übertragungsmechanismen von globalen Klimaänderungen zu verbessern. Insbesondere steht dabei die Lage und Ausdehnung der ozeanischen Frontensysteme (Subantarktische und Subtropische Front, Südpazifische Gyre) mit ihren Auswirkungen auf den atmosphärisch ozeanischen Kohlendioxidaustausch und die Nährstoffverwertung in der ozeanischen Deckschicht im Fokus. Dies soll anhand von Untersuchungen von Bor-Isotopen und B/Ca-Verhältnissen an planktischen Foraminiferen, von Wasseroberflächentemperaturen und Wärmetransfer des Humboldt-Stromes und der Veränderungen in der Zirkulation und Ventilation von Antarktischem Zwischenwasser, zirkumpolarem Antarktischem Tiefenwasser und Pazifischem Zentralwasser, sowie Änderungen in den Karbonatlösungsmustern anhand von geophysikalischen (Reflektionsseismik) und geochemischen Untersuchungen an Sedimentkernen von Sedimentkernen erreicht werden. Weiterhin sollen die ozeanischen Deckschicht in Abhängigkeit von Veränderungen der ozeanischen Fronten rekonstruiert, sowie die Änderungen der Tiefenwasserzirkulation, deren Bildungsgebiete und -phasen und der zeitliche Zusammenhang mit den paläoklimatischen Veränderungen untersucht werden.
Sediment cores from the Multicorer (MUC) are used for geochemical analyses. (Photo: Alfred Wegener Institute / Thomas Ronge)
AWI-Permafrostexperten untersuchen die erodierende Küste  auf der sibirischen Insel Sobo-Sise im östlichen Lena-Delta

AWI permafrost scientists investigate the eroding coastline at the Siberian island Sobo-Sise, Eastern Lena delta.
AWI permafrost scientists investigate the eroding coastline at the Siberian island Sobo-Sise, Eastern Lena delta. (Photo: Alfred Wegener Institute / Guido Grosse)
Beprobung von Sedimentkernen
Sampling sediment cores. (Photo: Alfred-Wegener-Institut)
Geowissenschaftler begutachten im Polarstern-Geo-Labor einen auf dem ostgrönländischen Schelf geborgenen Sedimentkern (Mit Kastenlos gezogen). Foto: Alfred-Wegener-Institut / André Paul 

Scientists are sampling a sediment core in the so called geo-lab on board the research ship Polarstern. This sediment core was recovered with a box corer at the East Greenland shelf. Photo: Alfred-Wegener-Institut/ André Paul
Scientists are sampling a sediment core in the so called geo-lab on board the research ship Polarstern. This sediment core was recovered with a box corer. (Photo: Alfred-Wegener-Institut)
AWI scientist and COPER team member Stefanie Weege is taking the GPS coordinates of the edge of the cliff at Herschel Island to be able to compare the data from different years and get the amount of retreat or coastal erosion.

The Alfred Wegener Institute Helmholtz Center for Polar and Marine Research (AWI) commenced research in the western Canadian Arctic with the funding of the young researcher project titled Coastal Permafrost Erosion (COPER) in 2012. The group’s focus lay on investigating the mass transfer of sediments and carbon across the whole coastal tract of , i.e. include both the emergent and submerged parts of the coast of Herschel Island, Beaufort Sea, Canada.

Herschel Island (69.6°N, 139°W) is located in the Beaufort Sea, at the northernmost point of the Yukon Territory, and about 70 km east of the Alaskan border. The island is a push-moraine that formed during the westward advance of of the Laurentide Ice Sheet. The coast is characterized by high cliffs and numerous retrogressive thaw slumps, indicating the presence of large massive ice bodies susceptible to permafrost degradation.  The tundra covered island is located where mean annual temperatures are well below 0°C, and rise above freezing only between June and September. Cold temperatures affect coastal processes, as well.  Wave- and tide induced processes are limited by the presence of sea ice and landfast ice. The presence of ice, however, introduces some physical processes unique to cold environments such as ice gouging, ice rafting, ice push-up, and ice pile-up. Ice gouging refers to the grounding of ice keels; ice rafting the transport of coarse sediment offshore incorporated into the ice matrix; while ice push-up and pile-up occur at the land-sea boundary, transporting sediments on- and across shore. Coastal erosion is limited to the period of open water. Average rates of erosion are 1-2 m/yr, and may reach 10-30 m/yr, due to thermal abrasion - the combined effects of thermal and physical forces.


Permafrost is defined as ground (soil or rock and included ice or organic material) that remains at or below 0°C for at least two consecutive years. 

Coastal Erosion is defined as removal of material from the coast by wave action, tidal currents and/or the activities of man, typically causing a landward retreat of the coastline.
Coastal erosion leads to export of carbon from land to the sea. (Photo: Alfred-Wegener-Institut)
Aerial photo of Slump-D at Herschel Island. The slump is a massive, 500 m wide and 40 m high ice headwall, with lots of sediment in it. As the ice­rich headwall retreats up to 10 m every year landward, it leaves behind a massive mud pool that drains through several big mud channels into the ocean.

The Alfred Wegener Institute Helmholtz Center for Polar and Marine Research (AWI) commenced research in the western Canadian Arctic with the funding of the young researcher project titled Coastal Permafrost Erosion (COPER) in 2012. The group’s focus lay on investigating the mass transfer of sediments and carbon across the whole coastal tract of , i.e. include both the emergent and submerged parts of the coast of Herschel Island, Beaufort Sea, Canada.

Herschel Island (69.6°N, 139°W) is located in the Beaufort Sea, at the northernmost point of the Yukon Territory, and about 70 km east of the Alaskan border. The island is a push-moraine that formed during the westward advance of of the Laurentide Ice Sheet. The coast is characterized by high cliffs and numerous retrogressive thaw slumps, indicating the presence of large massive ice bodies susceptible to permafrost degradation.  The tundra covered island is located where mean annual temperatures are well below 0°C, and rise above freezing only between June and September. Cold temperatures affect coastal processes, as well.  Wave- and tide induced processes are limited by the presence of sea ice and landfast ice. The presence of ice, however, introduces some physical processes unique to cold environments such as ice gouging, ice rafting, ice push-up, and ice pile-up. Ice gouging refers to the grounding of ice keels; ice rafting the transport of coarse sediment offshore incorporated into the ice matrix; while ice push-up and pile-up occur at the land-sea boundary, transporting sediments on- and across shore. Coastal erosion is limited to the period of open water. Average rates of erosion are 1-2 m/yr, and may reach 10-30 m/yr, due to thermal abrasion - the combined effects of thermal and physical forces.


Permafrost is defined as ground (soil or rock and included ice or organic material) that remains at or below 0°C for at least two consecutive years. 

Coastal Erosion is defined as removal of material from the coast by wave action, tidal currents and/or the activities of man, typically causing a landward retreat of the coastline.
Aerial photo of Slump-D at Herschel Island. The slump is a massive, 500 m wide and 40 m high ice headwall, with lots of sediment in it. As the ice­rich headwall retreats up to 10 m every year landward, it leaves behind a massive mud pool that drains through several big ... (Photo: Alfred-Wegener-Institut)
AWI-Permafrostforscher untersuchen die erodierende Permafrost-Küste auf der sibirischen Bykovsky-Halbinsel.

AWI permafrost scientists investigate the eroding coastline at the Siberian Bykovsky peninsula.
AWI permafrost scientists investigate the eroding coastline at the Siberian Bykovsky peninsula. (Photo: Alfred-Wegener-Institut)