Riedel, M. et al. (2001): Deep-sea gas hydrates on the northern Cascadia margin

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 146
ODP 146 889
ODP 146 890
Identifier:
2003-034621
georefid

10.1190/1.1438888
doi

Creator:
Riedel, M.
University of Victoria, Victoria, BC, Canada
author

Spence, G. D.
University of Calgary, Canada
author

Chapman, N. R.
Pacific Geoscience Centre, Canada
author

Hyndman, R. D.
author

Identification:
Deep-sea gas hydrates on the northern Cascadia margin
2001
In: Enachescu, Michael (prefacer), Lines, Larry (prefacer), Canadian basins
Society of Exploration Geophysicists, Tulsa, OK, United States
20
1
87-91, 109
This article describes recent work on marine hydrates off western Canada. Natural occurrences of gas hydrates have been reported in the geoscience literature since the early 1970s. Gas hydrates are solid ice-like structures in which gas molecules (largely methane) are trapped within cages of water molecules. Some 50 regions of hydrate occurrence have been reported in marine, permafrost, and lake environments worldwide. Interest in gas hydrates is due to the fact that the total amount of hydrocarbons locked up in them probably exceeds other known fossil hydrocarbon resources.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:48.4159
West:-126.5253East: -126.5206
South:48.3945

Economic geology, geology of energy sources; Applied geophysics; aliphatic hydrocarbons; alkanes; amplitude; bottom-simulating reflectors; Cascadia subduction zone; continental margin; continental slope; deep-sea environment; elastic waves; gas hydrates; geophysical methods; geophysical profiles; geophysical surveys; hydrocarbons; Leg 146; marine environment; methane; ocean bottom seismographs; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 889; ODP Site 890; organic compounds; petroleum; petroleum exploration; resistivity; seismic methods; seismic profiles; seismographs; surveys; tectonics;

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