Another enormous, 165-foot (50-metre) crater has been spotted in Siberia’s Arctic tundra. The latest depression is nestled on the Gydan Peninsula, a plot of land to the east of the Yamal Peninsula.
Oleg Shabalin, who was first to report the find, believes the crater may have formed as a result of an abrupt release of methane, in common with other similar ones.
Such funnels of gases are "increasingly common throughout the tundra zone of Russia", he told The Siberian Times.
Scientists have meanwhile said this sludge-filled depression, which is about 65 feet (roughly 20 metres) deep, likely formed due to warm temperatures, with ice trapped in the permafrost thawing and making the soil collapse.
"We have been studying thermocirques for many years”, Marina Leibman, from the Earth Cryosphere Institute - part of the Russian Academy of Sciences, shared with The Siberian Times, adding that they became active in the year 2012, which was remarkable for its warm temperatures. She noted that they resemble huge landslides, semi-circular in shape, punctuated with blocks of ice.
“Earlier such thermocirques were observed near the sea, now they are seen deeper on land. They are associated with ice layers and warming”, the expert explained.
The biggest permafrost crater in the world is also located in Siberia, in the eastern part, and it has been described as the "gateway to the underworld”.
Being over 3,200 feet (975 metres) long and 300 feet (91 metres) deep, it has of late shown exponential growth: in July, Science Magazine reported that the rate of growth at this crater, called the Batagay Crater, had spiked and was growing by 29 to 45 feet per year.