Decreasing snow cover causes increasing methane production in frozen lakes
Climate change in the Arctic – Norsk Polarinstitutt
Alabama, Alaska, and the Mystery of Arctic Methane, by US Arctic, Our Arctic Nation
The dangers of fire-ice for the planet
Frontiers Effects of long-term climate trends on the methane and CO2 exchange processes of Toolik Lake, Alaska
Decreased Snow Cover Stimulates Under-Ice Primary Producers but Impairs Methanotrophic Capacity
After 2000-era plateau, global methane levels hitting new highs
Phosphorus Regulation of Methane Oxidation in Water From Ice‐Covered Lakes - Sawakuchi - 2021 - Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences - Wiley Online Library
Turn down the heat
Why Frozen Ground Matters National Snow and Ice Data Center
PDF) Reduced Snow Cover Increases Wintertime Nitrous Oxide (N2O) Emissions from an Agricultural Soil in the Upper U.S. Midwest
A synthesis of carbon dioxide and methane dynamics during the ice‐covered period of northern lakes - Denfeld - 2018 - Limnology and Oceanography Letters - Wiley Online Library
Using space-based radar, researchers develop new method for measuring Arctic lake methane emissions - Alaska Public Media
Why Snow Matters National Snow and Ice Data Center