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Passing gas through the hydrate stability zone at southern Hydrate Ridge, offshore Oregon: Earth and Planetary
- Science Letters
, 2006
"... We present an equilibrium model of methane venting through the hydrate stability zone at southern Hydrate Ridge, offshore Oregon. Free gas supplied from below forms hydrate, depletes water, and elevates salinity until pore water is too saline for further hydrate formation. This system self-generates ..."
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Cited by 8 (2 self)
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We present an equilibrium model of methane venting through the hydrate stability zone at southern Hydrate Ridge, offshore Oregon. Free gas supplied from below forms hydrate, depletes water, and elevates salinity until pore water is too saline for further hydrate formation. This system self-generates local three-phase equilibrium and allows free gas migration to the seafloor. Log and core data from Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Site 1249 show that from the seafloor to 50 m below seafloor (mbsf), pore water salinity is elevated to the point where liquid water, hydrate and free gas coexist. The elevated pore water salinity provides a mechanism for vertical migration of free gas through the regional hydrate stability zone (RHSZ). This process may drive gas venting through hydrate stability zones around the world. Significant amount of gaseous methane can bypass the RHSZ by shifting local thermodynamic conditions.
GENERALIZATION OF GAS HYDRATE DISTRIBUTION AND SATURATION IN MARINE SEDIMENTS BY SCALING OF THERMODYNAMIC AND TRANSPORT PROCESSES
, 2007
"... ABSTRACT. Gas hydrates dominated by methane naturally occur in deep marine sediment along continental margins. These compounds form in pore space between the seafloor and a sub-bottom depth where appropriate stability conditions prevail. However, the amount and distribution of gas hydrate within thi ..."
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Cited by 1 (0 self)
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ABSTRACT. Gas hydrates dominated by methane naturally occur in deep marine sediment along continental margins. These compounds form in pore space between the seafloor and a sub-bottom depth where appropriate stability conditions prevail. However, the amount and distribution of gas hydrate within this zone, and free gas below, can vary significantly at different locations. To understand this variability, we develop a one-dimensional numerical model that simulates the accumulation of gas hydrates in marine sediments due to upward and downward fluxes of methane over time. The model contains rigorous thermodynamic and component mass balance equations that are solved using expressions for fluid flow in compacting sediments. The effect of salinity on gas hydrate distribution is also included. The simulations delineate basic modes of gas hydrate distribution in marine sediment, including systems with no gas hydrate, gas hydrate without underlying free gas, and gas hydrate with underlying free gas below the gas hydrate stability zone, for various methane sources. The results are scaled using combinations of dimensionless variables, particularly the Peclet number and Damkohler number, such that the
Office of Fossil EnergyDetailed Core Procedures Manual Volume 1 – Core Acquisition
, 2009
"... This “Core Procedures Manual, Volume 1 ” contains a description of proposed best practices for use during coring operations for the Barrow Gas Hydrate Test Well Program. This document is designed to describe the responsibilities of well site operations personnel, primarily the core acquisition contr ..."
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This “Core Procedures Manual, Volume 1 ” contains a description of proposed best practices for use during coring operations for the Barrow Gas Hydrate Test Well Program. This document is designed to describe the responsibilities of well site operations personnel, primarily the core acquisition contractor and coring fluids contractor, Weatherford/Omni and Halliburton/Baroid
DYNAMICS OF SHALLOW MARINE GAS HYDRATE AND FREE GAS SYSTEMS
"... Multi-phase fluid flow is critical to the formation and concentration of gas hydrate in marine sediments. A transient, multi-phase (hydrate, gas and liquid) fluid and heat flow model is presented to describe hydrate formation in porous media. Fluid flux and physical properties of sediment largely co ..."
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Multi-phase fluid flow is critical to the formation and concentration of gas hydrate in marine sediments. A transient, multi-phase (hydrate, gas and liquid) fluid and heat flow model is presented to describe hydrate formation in porous media. Fluid flux and physical properties of sediment largely control the dynamics of gas hydrate formation and free gas migration. In fine-grained sediments, hydrate formation leads to rapid permeability reduction and capillary sealing. Free gas accumulates below the hydrate layer until a critical gas column builds up, thereby forcing gas upward to the seafloor. In coarse-grained sediments, large volumes of gas are transported into the hydrate region to produce a significant change in salinity. An interconnected three-phase zone with high hydrate concentration and elevated salinity develops from the base of hydrate stability to the seafloor. Both processes may drive gas venting through the hydrate stability zone. We also extend these models to demonstrate that the likely impact of climatic warming events on marine hydrate reservoirs. If hydrates are originally formed in the two-phase region, dissociated methane cannot be released to the ocean until the warming at the seafloor exceeds a critical value. However, all of hydrates formed within the threephase
Geochemical Transactions
, 2007
"... Research article Physicochemical conditions and timing of rodingite formation: evidence from rodingite-hosted fluid inclusions in the JM Asbestos ..."
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Research article Physicochemical conditions and timing of rodingite formation: evidence from rodingite-hosted fluid inclusions in the JM Asbestos

