As we track the intersection of the economy and environment--here looking at possible man made sources like mining--it is fascinating to see science, commerce, use of assets converging around undoing some past mistakes that plaque our preservation of natural resources. That fix, though, will not costs us jobs, options on powering our future or expensive remediation. Instead we will quickly restore balance to a wonderful, majestic place that will be enjoyed for generations.
Solving the Four Corners Mystery: Probes Map Methane 'Hot Spot'
by Stephanie Pappas
The desert Four Corners region
contains beautiful landforms like Shiprock in New Mexico. It's also the site
of an anomalous blob containing high levels of methane.
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The mysterious methane was first detected from space, via a European Space Agency satellite that can measure this potent greenhouse gas. Researchers reported the discovery in October in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, but couldn't explain where the extra methane was coming from. The "hot spot" persisted from 2003 until at least 2009. And the amount of methane was significant, the researchers reported — equal to nearly 10 percent of all U.S. methane emissions from natural gas.
Now, a team of researchers is tackling the mystery of the extra methane. The scientists will fly two Twin Otter aircraft over the Four Corners area, where the borders of Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and Arizona meet. These planes will carry two instruments: the Next-Generation Airborne Visible/Infrared Imaging Spectrometer (AVIRISng), which can detect and map methane in great detail, according to NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory; and the Hyperspectral Thermal Emission Spectrometer (HyTES).
The trail is not entirely cold. The timing and persistence of the hot spot suggests the methane may be coming from gas extraction, coal mining, and coal-bed methane mining and processing in the region, the researchers reported in their paper on the discovery in the Geophysical Research Letters journal. Naturally occurring gas seeps are another possibility, NASA said.
If the methane hot spot is man-made, the measurements researchers make in the coming months over Four Corners could help reduce the emissions.
"If we can verify the methane detected by the satellite and identify its sources, decision-makers will have critical information for any actions they are considering," CIRES scientist Gabrielle Pétron said in the statement.
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