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Underwater robot in Siberia's Lake Baikal reveals hidden mud volcanoes — and an active fault

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A robot deployed to the bottom of Siberia's Lake Baikal last summer captured footage of cracks and deformations caused by previously unknown mud volcanoes — and you can watch the discovery in a video below.

The robot discovered scars left behind by eruptions of mud at depths of 340 to 540 feet (100 to 165 meters) in two locations — Malaya Kosa Bay and Goryachinskaya Bay — along the northwestern shore of the lake. Although scientists already knew Lake Baikal harbored mud volcanoes, the latest find sits uncomfortably close to a fault zone known as the Severobaikalsk, or North Baikal fault, which straddles the lakeshore. Signs of recent eruptions at the bottom of the lake could indicate the fault is gearing up for an earthquake.

Mud volcanoes are surface expressions of deeper geological processes and form as a result of slurries and gases erupting from below. Craters along Lake Baikal's northwestern shore "mark cracks that run parallel to the Severobaikalsk fault" and indicate the fault may be active, according to Oksana Lunina, a structural geologist and senior researcher at the Institute of the Earth's Crust in the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences (SBRAS) who participated in the discovery. 

"In the North Baikal depression, which is limited by this fault, there have been strong earthquakes in the past," Lunina said in a translated statement.

The two sites where researchers deployed the robot, or autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV), showed intensely fractured beds blanketed with clay, soft sediments and erupted deposits. In the northernmost Goryachinskaya Bay location, where the footage was taken, craters around 430 feet (130 m) deep were overflowing with a "mud mass," indicating an eruption had occurred recently, according to a study published in October 2023 in the journal Doklady Earth Sciences.

Related: 'Worrisome and even frightening': Ancient ecosystem of Lake Baikal at risk of regime change from warming

The footage shows layers of rock that were torn and forced up by eruptions of mud and gas-saturated fluids. Boulders appeared to have been "squeezed out" from below, and the dusting of clay and silt on top looked disturbed and porous, the researchers noted in the study.

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