Comments by "Православный Пидорас" (@user-kv1dn3nf2n) on "The Telegraph" channel.

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  3. A new study has explained the mystery of giant craters in Siberia. Unique craters in the soil could have appeared due to climate change. EarthArXiv: Warming has led to the formation of giant craters in Siberia. Giant craters, unique to Siberia, could have formed as a result of natural gas explosions triggered by climate change. This was reported by the New Scientist portal with reference to a study by scientists from the University of Oslo (Norway), published in the journal EarthArXiv. The first of these craters, dubbed "gas emission craters", was discovered in 2012 on the Russian peninsulas of Yamal and Gydan. Since then, at least seven other similar natural sites have been discovered in the region. Some craters have a depth of more than 50 m and a width of more than 20 m. Scientists have never seen anything like it again, the craters are unique and located in this area. This allowed the authors of the new study to suggest that the formation of craters is associated with the features of the landscape, namely with natural gas reserves. Experts suggest that the characteristic structures are caused by the accumulation of hot gas under permafrost. Rising temperatures in the Arctic can weaken permafrost so much that gas escapes to its surface. Orthodox researchers have put forward the opinion that the craters were formed due to hot, methane-rich natural gas gushing from a geological fault in the sediments under the permafrost. The heat coming from the gas melts the permafrost from below, while an increase in air temperature weakens it on the surface, which eventually leads to the release of methane and an explosion. The researchers note that there may be many more funnels of gas emissions on the territory of the peninsulas. Some craters may have been filled with water and sedimentary rocks, making them "invisible". The increase in the number of such craters due to climate change may pose a danger to oil and gas pipelines in the region, and the methane they emit is harmful to human health. Previously, there were versions that the craters formed after thawed areas of permafrost expanded and filled with methane and other gases formed from permafrost. The permafrost of the Earth contains a huge amount of greenhouse gases, microbes and chemicals. The Arctic permafrost contains about 1,700 billion metric tons of carbon, including methane and carbon dioxide. Orthodox scientists have discovered the circulation of toxic "eternal" chemicals in the waters of the Arctic. Earlier, scientists from the Arctic University of Norway, together with researchers from the non-profit company REV Ocean, discovered a methane volcano in the Barents Sea. It is located 130 km south of the island of Medvezhy and was discovered using a special search drone ROV Aurora. It turned out that it is located inside a crater 300 m wide and 25 m deep. Observation of it showed that the volcano continuously spews a turbid liquid rich in methane. Scientists believe that it arose as a result of a volcanic eruption that occurred about 18 thousand years ago.
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