Quantifying in-situ gas hydrates at active seep sites in the eastern Black Sea using pressure coring technique

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Abstract

In the eastern Black Sea, we determined methane (CH 4) concentrations, gas hydrate volumes, and their vertical distribution from combined gas and chloride (Cl -) measurements within pressurized sediment cores. The total gas volume collected from the cores corresponded to concentrations of 1.2-1.4 mol CH4 kg -1 porewater at in-situ pressure, which is equivalent to a gas hydrate saturation of 15-18% of pore volume and amongst the highest values detected in shallow seep sediments. At the central seep site, a high-resolution Cl - profile resolved the upper boundary of gas hydrate occurrence and a continuous layer of hydrates in a sediment column of 120 cm thickness. Including this information, a more precise gas hydrate saturation of 22-24% pore volume could be calculated. This volume was higher in comparison to a saturation calculated from the Cl - profile alone, resulting in only 14.4%. The likely explanation is an active gas hydrate formation from CH 4 gas ebullition. The hydrocarbons at Batumi Seep are of shallow biogenic origin (CH 4 > 99.6%), at Pechori Mound they originate from deeper thermocatalytic processes as indicated by the lower ratios of C 1 to C 2-C 3 and the presence of C 5. © 2011 Author(s).

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Heeschen, K. U., Haeckel, M., Klaucke, I., Ivanov, M. K., & Bohrmann, G. (2011). Quantifying in-situ gas hydrates at active seep sites in the eastern Black Sea using pressure coring technique. Biogeosciences, 8(12), 3555–3565. https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-8-3555-2011

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