Soloviev, V. and Ginsburg, G. D. (1994): Formation of submarine gas hydrates

Leg/Site/Hole:
Identifier:
2008-090917
georefid

Creator:
Soloviev, V.
Research Institute for Geology and Mineral Resources of the Ocean, St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
author

Ginsburg, G. D.
author

Identification:
Formation of submarine gas hydrates
1994
In: Jorgensen, Niels Oluf (editor), Gas in marine sediments
Geological Society of Denmark, Copenhagen, Denmark
41, Part 1
86-94
Submarine gas hydrates have been discovered in the course of deep-sea drilling (DSDP and OOP) and bottom sampling in many offshore regions. This paper reports on expeditions carried out in the Black, Caspian and Okhotsk Seas. Gas hydrate accumulations were discovered and investigated in all these areas. The data and an analysis of the results of the deep-sea drilling programme suggest that the infiltration of gas-bearing fluids is a necessary condition for gas hydrate accumulation. This is confirmed by geological observations at three scale levels. Firstly, hydrates in cores are usually associated with comparatively coarse-grained, permeable sediments as well as voids and fractures. Secondly, hydrate accumulations are controlled by permeable geological structures, i.e. faults, diapirs, mud volcanos as well as layered sequences. Thirdly, in the worldwide scale, hydrate accumulations are characteristic of continental slopes and rises and intra-continental seas where submarine seepages also are widespread. Both biogenic and catagenic gas may occur, and the gas sources may be located at various distances from the accumulation. Gas hydrates presumably originate from water-dissolved gas. The possibility of a transition from dissolved gas into hydrate is confirmed by experimental data. Shallow gas hydrate accumulations associated with gas-bearing fluid plumes are the most convenient features for the study of submarine hydrate formation in general. These accumulations are known from the Black, Caspian and Okhotsk Seas, the Gulf of Mexico and off northern California.
English
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:40.0000
West:49.3000East: 52.0000
South:38.0000

Economic geology, geology of energy sources; Oceanography; aliphatic hydrocarbons; alkanes; Atlantic Ocean; Black Sea; C-13/C-12; California; carbon; Caspian Sea; Deep Sea Drilling Project; diapirs; dissolved materials; East Mediterranean; faults; gas hydrates; gas seeps; geochemistry; geophysical methods; geophysical surveys; Gulf of Mexico; hydrocarbons; isotope ratios; isotopes; Mediterranean Sea; methane; North Atlantic; North Pacific; Northern California; Northwest Pacific; Ocean Drilling Program; ocean floors; offshore; Okhotsk Sea; organic compounds; Pacific Ocean; petroleum; petroleum accumulation; petroleum exploration; seismic methods; stable isotopes; submarine volcanoes; surveys; United States; volcanoes; West Pacific;

.