Title: Methane Hydrate
1Methane Hydrate
Depth - about 1000 m
Suess and Thompson, 1999
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7Oregons continental shelf is an active margin
8- In contrast, the east coast continental shelf is
a passive margin. - Both can and do have deposits of gas hydrates.
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10Methane plumes in the ocean overlying the
deposits at Hydrate Ridge off the coast of
Oregon. Methane hydrate deposits that are
actively deforming in the accretionary prism and
releasing unknown amounts of carbon into the
overlying ocean and atmosphere. Further,
estimates of global abundance of methane hydrate
are in the range 15 Gigatons, a value that has
caused government, industry, and academic groups
to begin considering the resource potential of
these volatile deposits. These formations appear
to be common to the continental slope in many
environments around the world. The hydrate
systems off the Oregon coast promise to become
one of the major study areas in the world for
this kind of work
Water
Seafloor
11Gas Hydrates and associated macrofauna on the
seafloor. Microbial populations in these systems
utilize methane and sulfate as nutrient sources
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13Vent fauna community in a box corer sample found
at Hydrate Ridge.
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16Ocean sediments as a resource
- Ocean sediments contain many important resources,
including - Petroleum
- Gas hydrates
- Sand and gravel
- Evaporative salts
- Phosphorite
- Manganese nodules and crusts
Offshore drilling rig
Figure 4-21
17Clathrate/Methane Hydrates and Climate Change
- Methane (CH4) is a much stronger greenhouse gas
than carbon dioxide. It is usually released from
swamps or through biomass burning. But it is also
trapped in huge amounts in some ocean-floor
sediments, where it lies buried in a strange kind
of ice known as 'methane clathrate'. These
clathrates are stable only within a certain range
of temperatures and pressures when brought to
the surface, they melt rapidly and release
burnable gas to the air. - A catastrophic release of trillions of tonnes of
methane is thought to have triggered a
temperature jump some 55 million years ago in an
already warm climate at the Palaeocene/Eocene
boundary (see ' Gas leak!'). But some scientists
suspect that similar methane bursts, triggered
perhaps by submarine landslides, sea-level drops
or changes in water temperature, may also have
caused a number of rapid warming episodes during
and at the end of the last glacial period.
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