Global Warming & Ocean Gas: An Interview with Rice University Professor Gerald Dickens 
Welcome to Planet Earth: Our Loving Home.
 In light of growing concerns about climate change and its effects on 
the planet, Supreme Master Television visited with Dr. Gerald Dickens, 
associate professor of Earth Science at the prestigious Rice University,
 located in Houston, Texas, USA. 
The private institution has earned respect as
 a pioneer in the fields of nanotechnology, structural chemical 
analysis, and space science. 
As one of the most widely known and
 highly regarded universities in the United States, it is often highly 
ranked in numerous reports. Professor Dickens is a leading researcher 
into the past history of the world’s oceans, with respect to the 
changing patterns of their geology, chemistry and biology. 
Currently,
 he serves as the Paleoceanography Editor-in-Chief of the “American 
Geophysical Union,” the most cited journal in the Earth Sciences field 
throughout the world. Today, Professor Dickens shares his wealth of 
knowledge and provides a neutral base for us to discern the relations 
between global warming and marine geology,and how they affect the future
 of our planet. 
SupremeMasterTV: We are meeting with Professor 
Gerald Dickens who is professor of Earth Science at Rice University here
 in Houston, Texas, USA. It’s a pleasure to have you on the program 
Professor Dickens and our topic of discussion is ocean gas and the 
potential effect of global warming on this ocean gas. 
Can you tell me firstly, what ocean gas are we talking about?
Professor Dickens: Most of it’s methane, and there will be methane that is stored in the sediments at the bottom of the ocean.
SupremeMasterTV: I understand that it’s stored in a crystal form. Can you explain that?
Professor Dickens: Yes. Methane can be both 
dissolved in water, it can be as gas bubbles or it can be in an unusual 
structure, what we call methane hydrate. That’s when we take methane 
molecules and water molecules and then combine together to form a cage, 
with the methane on the inside.It looks very much like ice.
SupremeMasterTV: And I understand that it’s called “fire in ice.” Can you explain that?
Professor Dickens: Well, because it looks very 
much like ice, but as it melts it releases methane, which is the same 
gas that’s used in natural gas for stoves and things like that.So you 
can imagine if you put a match to it, it looks like a piece of ice with a
 flame on top. 
SupremeMasterTV: Now the next thing is, are we talking about any other gases particularly in the ocean, or is it mainly methane?
Professor Dickens: Well, there is certainly carbon
 dioxide that’s dissolved in the ocean and that’s a major role, but we 
don’t usually think of it as in the gas phase there.  And so really, the
 main gas that we’re thinking, in terms of the large amounts of gas in 
the marine system, is methane.
SupremeMasterTV: Can you tell me how is that methane produced in the oceans? How is it actually produced?
Professor Dickens: Most of it occurs when organic 
carbon lands on the sea floor. That means things, organisms, when they 
die, as they fall through the water and land to the bottom of the ocean.
 As they get buried, various microbes start consuming the organic 
carbon. And one set of microbes is the Archaea, and a sub-set of the 
Archaea are the ones that produce methane. So they take various 
constituents from the original organic carbon and convert it to methane.
SupremeMasterTV: Very interesting, and I understand there’s a whole eco-system in these organisms down there on the ocean floor in the sediment.
Professor Dickens: Yes.
SupremeMasterTV: How does the methane stay in the ocean? What is keeping the methane there?
Professor Dickens: This one’s a little bit 
complicated to explain. Essentially, it’s always there, but it’s always 
been added to and it’s leaving. So in other words, as the methane’s 
being produced, it’s also being consumed. So we end up with a steady 
state system. 
Perhaps the best analogy would be a forest. So, with 
photosynthesis, we make new organic carbon in trees and as the trees 
die, they release organic carbon. 
The same thing happens in 
marine sediments. So, as the organic carbon enters the sediment, the 
Archaea turn it into methane. That methane is now in the sediment but, 
at the same time, it’s slowly leaking out. And as it leaks out, it gets 
either consumed by oxygen or another species that’s dissolved in water 
which we call sulfate. So those are our sort of outputs.
SupremeMasterTV: And can you talk about temperature and water pressure in relationship to methane and hydrates of methane.
Professor Dickens: Sure. In this cycle that we’ve 
just talked about, as we make methane, if a lot of methane is made and 
we’re at relatively high pressure caused by the water, and at relatively
 cold temperatures, such as the bottom of the ocean, then, as we start 
making the methane, it will precipitate out in this solid clathrate 
phase that we talked about earlier, where the water and the methane 
combine to form this cage-like ice structure.
And that will precipitate and clog up the pores in the sediment. So
 you can imagine a little bit of methane going in, a little bit of 
methane coming out. But most of the methane in many parts of the world, 
 is  stored in the solid phase in the sediment.
SupremeMasterTV: And whereabouts is it distributed? Whereabouts in the ocean floor do we find this methane?
Professor Dickens: Well, in general we sort of 
need a couple of places. First we need, to get these very large methane 
deposits where the methane is in the solid phase, we need both cold 
temperatures and relatively high pressures. We’re talking generally 500 
meters or so water depth.
Professor Dickens: For example, if we go out in 
the middle of the ocean, we have very cold temperatures at the sea 
floor. The waters are very deep. But there is very little organic carbon
 reaching the ocean there. 
So we don’t see very much methane. In fact, in the middle of parts 
of the ocean, there is really no methane. However, as we get closer to 
the continents, we have both organic carbon coming off rivers, as well 
as we have fairly productive regions. 
So you can imagine where this puts it, is on a sort of slope of 
continental margins, where we have both the input and supply of organic 
carbon, plus the pressure, plus the temperature.
SupremeMasterTV:The organic carbon is things like what, decomposing organisms or plants or…?
Professor Dickens: The simplest way for the 
average person to think of it is, a fish dies and it falls to the 
bottom. But in terms of overall mass, most of it is phytoplankton. So 
single celled organisms, algae, diatoms, various phytoplankton that live
 and die and fall down to the bottom of the ocean.
SupremeMasterTV: Is the methane fairly evenly 
distributed around the world on these continental slopes, or is there 
more concentration in various areas of the world?
Professor Dickens: It’s clearly distributed in 
some places more than others. It’s in particular in areas where we’ve 
had a lot of organic carbon land on the sea floor for quite some time. 
None of these systems are new. So they take a long time to accumulate 
very large amounts of methane, we are talking millions of years. So you 
need a supply of organic carbon for a long time. 
There are certain areas where we’ve had this supply, and those are 
the areas we really find a lot of methane. It’s a little more 
complicated than that. Part of it is, there are areas around the world 
that we haven’t really looked, so we don’t know the full distribution. 
But I think it’s fair to say that it is unevenly distributed. But, in 
general, we have found it around all continents.
SupremeMasterTV: What are the beneficial effects of methane?  
Professor Dickens: Well, I guess it depends who’s 
benefiting. I mean, certainly, for humans, we like to use methane as 
natural gas. It’s now a large fraction of the energy, in many countries,
 is derived off natural gas. And certainly, as we talked about before, 
you can light methane hydrates or the methane that comes off these 
materials.So it can be used as an energy source. Certainly, it’s part of
 the large eco-system that we have just scratched the surface. We don’t 
really understand this. But this very large, what we call the deep 
biosphere, this methane’s crucial to that eco-system.
SupremeMasterTV: Coming back now, so the fact that
 the methane stays sequestered in the ocean as long as the temperatures 
are cold enough and the depth of the ocean, and there’s enough pressure.
 So what about warming? How does global warming have the potential 
effect on this methane sequestered in the oceans?
Professor Dickens: We always have a little bit of 
methane being formed and a little bit of methane leaving in this large 
body of methane that's sitting there. However, that large body is 
sensitive to pressure and temperature and so, what we know, at least in 
the laboratory, is if we take the solid phase and we either increase the
 temperature or decrease the pressure, that solid phase goes from the 
ice-like crystal structure into its constituents, so into water plus 
gas. 
And so what we think happens, and it certainly potentially can 
happen, is as you warm up marine sediment or decrease the pressure, the 
solid phase can convert to gas and then you have an over-pressured 
system, and we think that a lot of gas can come out very fast.
SupremeMasterTV: Coming back now, so the fact that
 the methane stays sequestered in the ocean as long as the temperatures 
are cold enough and the depth of the ocean, and there’s enough pressure.
 So what about warming? How does global warming have the potential 
effect on this methane sequestered in the oceans?
Professor Dickens:
 We always have a little bit of methane being formed and a little bit of
 methane leaving in this large body of methane that's sitting there. 
However, that large body is sensitive to pressure and temperature and 
so, what we know, at least in the laboratory, is if we take the solid 
phase and we either increase the temperature 
or decrease the 
pressure, that solid phase goes from the ice-like crystal structure into
 its constituents, so into water plus gas.And so what we think happens, 
and it certainly potentially can happen, is as you warm up marine 
sediment or decrease the pressure, the solid phase can convert to gas 
and then you have an over-pressured system, and we think that a lot of 
gas can come out very fast.
SupremeMasterTV: So what would that do to the 
world? To the plant life, the human life the planet itself, if a lot of 
methane gas was released as a result of global warming heating up the 
oceans? What are the potentials?
Prof. Dickens: Well, the first thing to think 
about is, where does the methane go? So, if the methane comes out of the
 sediment there's really sort of two possibilities. 
One is it 
would go into the ocean and be oxidized in the ocean, in which case the 
methane would be converted to carbon dioxide in the ocean. And probably 
the most significant effect right off the bat, is acidification. So you 
drop the pH.
SupremeMasterTV: Yeah, the oceans would become acidic, wouldn’t they?
Prof. Dickens: The second possibility is, of 
course, you could bubble methane up to the atmosphere. Or, it turns out 
an interesting phenomenon that we have discovered is that sometimes 
pieces of hydrate will float, and so they can float up very shallow and 
then dissociate near the ocean surface. 
So, there's ways to get methane into the atmosphere. 
Now, 
there, it turns out, what's interesting with methane, is it's a very 
potent greenhouse gas, much more potent than CO2. So the net effect of 
that is to essentially contribute to warming.
SupremeMasterTV: So we're talking about volumes 
here. How much volume of methane? I've read estimates of anything up to 
10 trillion tons of methane in the ocean.
Prof. Dickens: Let's just think about this. I usually think in gigatons and so a gigaton is 1 trillion tons.
SupremeMasterTV: 1 trillion tons.
Prof. Dickens: And so we usually think somewhere 
on the order of 2,000 to 20,000 gigatons are the sort of estimates for 
how much methane is stored in the crystal phase, of which again there 
will be also gas bubbles and dissolved. And so the total system, 
we're talking on the order of somewhere on that range of 2,000 to 20,000 gigatons of methane. 
SupremeMasterTV: And if that was released into the atmosphere?
Prof. Dickens: Well, I don't think it would be 
ever possible to release it all, but even if a fraction of 
thathttp://suprememastertv.tvhttp://suprememastertv.tv We can think 
about, for example, what humans are doing today. So probably, you know, 
if we burned all the fossil fuels that are available today, somewhere on
 the order of 4,000 gigatons of carbon that will be added to the 
atmosphere. 
So you can imagine that if 10,000 gigatons of methane - an average 
number for estimates that people have made…If one-tenth of that goes, 
you know, we are on the order of magnitude of what we are doing today, 
in terms of adding carbon dioxide.
SupremeMasterTV: So is methane toxic to humans?
Prof. Dickens: Certainly, if the entire atmosphere around you is methane, it is toxic.
SupremeMasterTV: There's no oxygen to breathe.
Prof. Dickens: But small amounts of methane are 
not going to be toxic, but certainly it's flammable so it's not a good 
idea to have lots of methane. 
SupremeMasterTV: Has this ever happened in the past, where a lot of methane gas has been released into the atmosphere on Earth?
Prof. Dickens: We think so. We are very confident 
that there are times in the past where large amounts of carbon dioxide 
go into the ocean and / or atmosphere very quickly. We think that the 
source of that carbon dioxide is oxidized methane. So that methane has 
come into the system and either by mixing with oxygen in the ocean or 
through various reactions in the atmosphere, it converted to CO2. 
SupremeMasterTV: And when did this happen?
Prof. Dickens: Probably the best studied of these 
times is about 55 million years ago, right after the Paleocene-Eocene 
boundary. And it's an interesting time, in that we see all sorts of 
environmental consequences. So something clearly happened. 
In fact, that's why we have a boundary there, because the organisms
 on life changed quite dramatically across this time period. And we see 
things such as over 6, 7 degree warming around the world, including the 
high latitudes. We see changes in the hydrologic cycle, so some places 
become very dry, some places become very wet. We see ocean 
acidification. We see changes in oxygen content in the ocean. So many, 
many different environmental changes occurred during this time.
SupremeMasterTV: Has this ever happened in the past, where a lot of methane gas has 
been released into the atmosphere on Earth?
Prof. Dickens: We think so. We are very confident 
that there are times in the past where large amounts of carbon dioxide 
go into the ocean and / or atmosphere very quickly. We think that the 
source of that carbon dioxide is oxidized methane. 
So that methane has come into the system and either by mixing with 
oxygen in the ocean or through various reactions in the atmosphere, it 
converted to CO2. 
SupremeMasterTV: And when did this happen?
Prof. Dickens: Probably the best studied of these 
times is about 55 million years ago, right after the Paleocene-Eocene 
boundary. And it's an interesting time, in that we see all sorts of 
environmental consequences. So something clearly happened. In fact, 
that's why we have a boundary there, because the organisms on life 
changed quite dramatically across this time period. 
And we see 
things such as over 6, 7 degree warming around the world, including the 
high latitudes. We see changes in the hydrologic cycle, so some places 
become very dry, some places become very wet. We see ocean 
acidification. We see changes in oxygen content in the ocean. So many, 
many different environmental changes occurred during this time.
SupremeMasterTV: What happened to the animal life then? What happened to the plant life? Is there evidence what happened to them?
Prof. Dickens: Well, it’s interesting. So if you 
look at organisms in the bottom of the ocean, many of them seem to go 
extinct. So life was not too good at the bottom of the ocean. On land, 
it's a much different sort of response and, you know, looks like 
organisms migrate. And so we see just the distribution of organisms 
change very, very fast.
Prof. Dickens: If we go into the north pole and 
drill a hole there and collect the sediment that was deposited there 55 
million years ago, it looks like temperatures somewhere in the 70 
degrees, although we're not totally sure whether those are summer 
temperatures or annual temperatures. Nonetheless it's still quite warm.
SupremeMasterTV: Very interesting. And we are thinking that methane was probably the reason at that time, is that right?
Prof. Dickens: Somehow… we think that methane is 
some component of this. And what we're not sure is whether it's 
essentially the trigger or a feedback. 
SupremeMasterTV: We were talking also about what can we do to help with global warming? 
Prof. Dickens: As far as methane, in terms of 
global warming, probably, certainly over the next 100 or 200 years these
 methane reservoirs in the deep ocean are probably not responsive at 
that sort of time scale. On the other hand, if we go to up to permafrost
 regions, yes, we can get methane coming out from the permafrost, which 
may act as a feedback.
So as we start melting permafrost we release extra methane As far 
global warming, that is just a huge problem. I can give you my own 
personal opinions. I think it’s going to take a radical view of a change
 in lifestyle, as well as new technologies. And it’s really going to 
take a combination of both. 
There are all sorts of these 
feedbacks, and many of them we don’t really fully understand. So, for 
example, there’s a paper, just a couple weeks ago, summarizing recent 
evidence that as you start warming things up, the biosphere, the plants 
start releasing more carbon than they take in. 
So when you start doing things, they start taking in carbon, but 
then they start kicking it back out. So it’s like, gosh! That’s a 
feedback that’s really problematic. That’s not in our models. And there 
are many of these things that we just really don’t understand right now.
 
SupremeMasterTV: I remember, in reading the 
papers, you were saying that the carbon in the methane is actually like a
 huge capacitor that people haven’t really worked into their thinking, 
and to do with the carbon cycle. 
Prof. Dickens: The carbon cycle. If you think of 
three boxes, it’s the easiest way to think of the carbon cycle. You have
 an atmosphere, a biosphere and the ocean.
Prof. Dickens: Biosphere, trees, plants; so the terrestrial biosphere. And all of these 
are
 connected. So you think of three boxes, much like, I like to think of 
it as a swimming pool and 2 hot tubs. And so between each one of these 
boxes there are inputs and outputs. In the analogy between the swimming 
pool and the hot tub, it’s essentially the ocean is the big box. And 
it’s a common misconception for the average person, they think that all 
the carbon is in trees.
 
But it turns out that most of the 
carbon, about 93% of it, is in the ocean, not in trees or in the 
atmosphere. So what’s happening right now is we’re adding a lot of 
carbon to the atmosphere. It’s coming in much faster than it can go into
 the biosphere or into the ocean. So that’s why the CO2 is going up 
very, very quickly.But it turns out, that if you suddenly realize there 
is a lot of methane on the planet, somewhere there is now a 4th box. 
So you can’t have an ocean that’s nominally 35,000 gigatons and 
then suddenly talk about methane being 10 or 20,000 gigatons. There’s 
another box in the system. So the simplest way to think about it is a 
capacitor. You have organic carbon. The normal way people think of the 
carbon cycle is, you have a little bit of carbon coming into the system,
 through volcanoes or through weathering, and a little bit of carbon 
coming out of the system. So you have this large box, a little bit of 
input and a little bit of output and the carbon cycle in between all 
this. And then, essentially by adding methane, what you have to say is, 
some portion of the organic carbon leaving the system then gets 
converted to methane, so you add a new box. Then a little bit leaks out 
and it goes back into the ocean.
The idea for the capacitor is that output can change dramatically 
in the time frame. Sometimes we can have a lot of methane come out very 
quickly.
SupremeMasterTV: With the temperature change.
Prof. Dickens: With the temperature change.
SupremeMasterTV: And the pressure change. 
Prof. Dickens: Yeah.
SupremeMasterTV: Is there any other comments, anything else that you think the general public should know?
Prof. Dickens: The fantastic thing is, I think I 
mentioned to you earlier today, is that 15 years ago, I don’t think 
anyone would have even asked me. I just sort of did my own thing and 
studied methane and climate change. Now people are actually interested. 
SupremeMasterTV: That’s a very important topic, 
very important. Well it’s been an absolute pleasure having you on the 
program, Professor Dickens. Thank you so very much for granting us this 
interview. 
Prof. Dickens: Well thank you for having me. 
We sincerely thank Dr. Dickens for sharing 
this discussion on the current studies of links between ocean gas and 
global warming. We sincerely wish you all the best in your endeavors to 
further our understanding in this very important area of research.