![]() ![]() Others wonder if changes in agriculture may be playing a role. Others point to the natural gas fracking boom in North America and its sometimes leaky infrastructure. Some scientists think tropical wetlands have gotten a bit wetter and are releasing more gas. Since 2007, methane has been on the rise, and no one is quite sure why. Over the same period, emissions from natural sources have stayed about the same.īut if you focus on just the past five decades-when modern scientific tools have been available to detect atmospheric methane-there have been fluctuations in methane levels that are harder to explain. The reason is simple: increasing human populations since the Industrial Revolution have meant more agriculture, more waste, and more fossil fuel production. The concentration of the gas was relatively steady for hundreds of thousands of years, but then started to increase rapidly around 1750. ![]() The long-term, global trend for atmospheric methane is clear. And eye-popping videos on the Internet show scientists lighting methane-rich Alaskan lakes on fire. Radar observations have shown bubbles of methane rising from the depths of the Arctic Ocean. In October 2014, scientists announced they had discovered satellite signals of a methane hotspot over the Four Corners region of the United States. Mysterious craters venting methane have appeared in Siberia’s Yamal Peninsula. Nighttime satellite images show points of light-some of them gas flares-in rural parts of North Dakota, Texas, and Colorado. In recent years, the gas has started to turn up in some surprising places. ![]()
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