As permafrost thaws, some headwaters in Canada’s North turn orange and toxic: study
Ancient bedrock exposed by disappearing permafrost is releasing toxic metals into Canada’s northern rivers, a new study says, with once-pristine subarctic streams now comparable in some cases to highly acidic, contaminated mining sites.
The findings out of Yukon point to an “unfolding environmental disaster,” one co-author said, and adds to alarm over the rapid climate-fuelled changes in the North.
“We don’t know the end point, but there’s nothing about this that gives me any feeling of like, ‘oh, we’re going to be OK’,” said co-author Sean Carey, a professor at McMaster University.
“I’m not even a gloomy person. This looks pretty gloomy.”

