World's Largest Permafrost Crater Expands, Unveils Prehistoric Secrets Amid Climate Concerns

June 1, 2026
World's Largest Permafrost Crater Expands, Unveils Prehistoric Secrets Amid Climate Concerns
  • Copernicus Sentinel-2 imagery captures Batagaika Crater, emphasizing its status as the world’s largest permafrost crater created by melting permafrost, known as a mega-slump.

  • Since the 1990s, the megaslump has mobilised about 35 million cubic meters of ground, with permafrost thaw accelerated as more ground is exposed to warming.

  • Nearby Batagay town, with just over 4,000 residents, lies to the northwest along the Yana River, which courses across Russia and shapes the landscape through sediment deposition and erosion.

  • The thawing permafrost has unearthed prehistoric remains, including a 50,000-year-old baby mammoth found in 2024 and an extinct horse (Equus lenensis) discovered in 2018, noted for containing the oldest liquid blood on record.

  • The feature is rapidly expanding, currently about 81 hectares in area, roughly 800 meters wide, 50 meters deep, and about 1 kilometer long, with its area tripling from 1991 to 2018 and fastest growth between 2010 and 2014.

  • The thaw releases an estimated 4,000–5,000 tons of carbon annually, creating a positive feedback loop that accelerates climate warming.

  • The crater is roughly 100 meters deep and about 1 kilometer long, expanding at around 30 meters per year due to deforestation and warmer temperatures that melt and drain ice, leaving subsiding sediments.

  • Deforestation in the 1950s–1960s removed canopy cover, exposing permafrost to warmer conditions and triggering sustained thaw and geological instability.

  • The surrounding tundra around the crater is green with shrubs and larch, while the crater slopes are largely barren and brown.

  • The Batagay crater sits in the Sakha Republic and is sometimes labeled the “Doomsday Glacier” or “Gateway to Hell,” underscoring its imposing scale and Arctic impact.

  • The Batagay (Batagaika) crater in northeast Siberia is the world’s largest megaslump—a thaw-related landslide formed after mid-20th century deforestation exposed permafrost, not a meteor crater.

  • thawing permafrost releases methane and carbon dioxide, contributing to greenhouse gas emissions and illustrating a warming planet, with occasional Ice Age fossils and mummified wildlife found in the area.

Summary based on 2 sources


Get a daily email with more Science stories

More Stories