Riedel, Michael et al. (2006): Geophysical and geochemical signatures associated with gas hydrate-related venting in the northern Cascadia margin

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 146
ODP 146 889
ODP 146 890
Identifier:
2006-013192
georefid

10.1130/B25720.1
doi

Creator:
Riedel, Michael
Natural Resources Canada, Geological Survey of Canada-Pacific, Sidney, BC, Canada
author

Novosel, Ivana
Rice University, United States
author

Spence, George D.
University of Victoria, Canada
author

Hyndman, Roy D.
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, United States
author

Chapman, Ross N.
Sidney Geophysical Consultants, Canada
author

Solem, Richard C.
author

Lewis, Trevor
author

Identification:
Geophysical and geochemical signatures associated with gas hydrate-related venting in the northern Cascadia margin
2006
Geological Society of America Bulletin
Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
118
1-2
23-38
This paper presents a comprehensive, multidisciplinary study of cold vents associated with near-seafloor gas hydrate. Several cold vents characterized by seismic blank zones have been identified on the northern Cascadia margin near Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Site 889/890. The most prominent vent site (Bullseye vent) has been the subject of intense geophysical and geochemical studies, including two- and three-dimensional (2D/3D) seismic imaging, heat flow measurements, piston coring with measurements of sediment physical properties and pore-fluid geochemistry, seafloor video observation, and sampling with the unmanned submersible ROPOS. The main seismically derived constraining observations are: (1) blanking increases with seismic frequency, (2) at low frequencies, layers can be traced through the zones, (3) blank zones widen with depth, (4) blank zones are underlain by a bottom simulating reflector (BSR), and (5) no velocity anomalies were detected across the vents. Constraints from piston core and thermal probe analyses are: (1) massive hydrate was recovered just below the seafloor at Bullseye vent, and (2) chemical alteration of sediments was observed by reduced magnetic susceptibility, increased thermal conductivity, and an elevated sulfate/methane interface. Additional constraints are: (1) no thermal anomaly was observed, (2) widespread carbonates and active chemosynthetic communities were found, and (3) elevated levels of methane were detected in the water column above Bullseye vent. We present a model for the seismic blanking at Bullseye vent that honors the constraints from all observations. The cold vents represent channels or networks of filamentous fractures containing hydrate and/or free gas. Free gas can be present within the hydrate stability field only in fractures, which may be coated with hydrate that prevents the inflow of water. The overall concentration of hydrate or gas within the vent must be small, because there was no observable velocity anomaly.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:48.4159
West:-126.5253East: -126.5206
South:48.3945

Oceanography; Applied geophysics; accretionary wedges; aliphatic hydrocarbons; alkanes; bottom-simulating reflectors; Bullseye Vent; Cascadia subduction zone; chemosynthesis; cold seeps; continental margin; cores; deep-sea environment; East Pacific; ecology; fractured materials; gas hydrates; geochemistry; geophysical methods; geophysical surveys; heat flow; hydrocarbons; identification; Leg 146; magnetic properties; magnetic susceptibility; marine environment; marine sediments; methane; North Pacific; Northeast Pacific; Ocean Drilling Program; ocean floors; ODP Site 889; ODP Site 890; organic compounds; Pacific Ocean; physical properties; pore water; sediments; seismic methods; sulfate ion; surveys; thermal conductivity; three-dimensional models; two-dimensional models; velocity structure; video methods;

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