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The thawing and decay of telltale, reddish mounds along the eastern shore of James Bay have led a team of Quebec researchers to conclude that the region's permafrost line has moved rapidly northward -- about 130 kilometres in just 50 years -- as part of a broader transformation of Canada's sub-Arctic frontier in the age of climate change. And the researchers from Université Laval warn that "if the trend continues, permafrost in the region will completely disappear in the near future." The study, carried out by biologists Simon Thibault and Serge Payette, is published in the scientific journal Permafrost and Periglacial Processes.
"While climate change is the most probable explanation for this phenomenon, the lack of long term climactic data for the area makes it impossible for the researchers to officially confirm this." However, the researchers found from temperature records that the average annual temperature in the area had increased by 2 C over the past 20 years. "If this trend keeps up, what is left of the palsas in the James Bay bogs will disappear altogether in the near future, and it is likely that the permafrost will suffer the same fate," Payette stated.
Originally posted by ForestForager
But I do agree that the consequences of ignoring this could be astronomical as you put it.
Originally posted by Doc Velocity
Sounds like a good thing, to me. Less permafrost equals more workable terrain, permitting more extensive human habitation farther north.
Is there anything wrong with that? Not at all. If not for receding glaciers and permafrost, more than half of the North American continent would still be under two miles of uninhabitable ice fields dating back tens of thousands of years..
Thank God that the permafrost is receding. It means new frontiers are opening up for the human species.
— Doc Velocity
Originally posted by Gamecock
When the permafrost melts, the buildings built on top of them start to sink into the ground... literally. So i suppose it would allow for "more extensive habitation", but it will come at quite a cost first.
Originally posted by loner007
The thawing of permafrost is the greatest threat to mankind. In areas of permafrost lies frozen biological matter when thawed gives off methane which is 20 times more effective at trapping heat than carbon dioxide.
Originally posted by Doc Velocity
Originally posted by ForestForager
But I do agree that the consequences of ignoring this could be astronomical as you put it.
What are the "astronomical consequences" of ignoring climate change that we can't affect one way or the other?
All we can do is adapt to it, take advantage of the situation, capitalize on the availability of fresh and workable terrain.
There's nothing we can do to replenish the permafrost; and, frankly, it's rather crazy to even think such a thing. Any attempt on our part to change the climate will be a grossly uninformed and ignorant attempt.
We don't know what drives the climate or climate change, obviously, or else there wouldn't be so many climatologists worldwide with egg on their faces.
— Doc Velocity
[edit on 2/19/2010 by Doc Velocity]