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  • 1
    Keywords: Seismic tomography Congresses ; Three-dimensional imaging Congresses ; Geomatics Congresses ; Sedimentary basins Congresses ; Konferenzschrift ; Sedimentationsbecken ; Sedimentologie ; Kohlenwasserstofflagerstätte ; Strukturgeologie ; Seismische Prospektion ; Seismik ; Dimension 3 ; Dreidimensionale Seismik
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: VIII, 355 S. , Ill., Kt. , 1 CD-ROM , 31 cm
    Edition: Online-Ausg.
    Series Statement: Geological Society memoir 29
    DDC: 622.1592
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 2
    Keywords: Seismic tomography Congresses ; Three-dimensional imaging Congresses ; Geomatics Congresses ; Sedimentary basins Congresses ; Konferenzschrift 2001 ; Konferenzschrift ; Sedimentationsbecken ; Sedimentologie ; Kohlenwasserstofflagerstätte ; Strukturgeologie ; Sedimentationsbecken ; Seismische Prospektion ; Seismik ; Dimension 3 ; Sedimentationsbecken ; Sedimentologie ; Kohlenwasserstofflagerstätte ; Strukturgeologie ; Sedimentationsbecken ; Seismische Prospektion ; Seismik ; Dimension 3 ; Sedimentationsbecken ; Seismische Prospektion ; Dreidimensionale Seismik
    Type of Medium: Book
    Pages: VIII, 355 S. , Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. , 1 CD-ROM
    ISBN: 1862391513
    Series Statement: Memoir / Geological Society, London 29
    DDC: 622.1592
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Note: "Result of a conference held in November 2001 at The Geological Society, London." , Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2020-02-06
    Description: Establishing whether past millennial-scale climate change affected the stability of marine methane hydrate is important for our understanding of climatic change and determining the fate of marine hydrates in a future warmer world. We show, using three-dimensional seismic data offshore of Mauritania, that episodic, millennial-scale shifts of the base of the hydrate stability zone can be imaged below the ocean floor. Process modeling suggests that the base of the hydrate stability zone should have shallowed and deepened in response to climate change over the past ∼150,000 yr. Specifically, there is seismic evidence for millennial-scale shifts during the Holocene (∼11,700 yr ago to present) at a temporal resolution that has previously been unrealized. This is the first evidence that millennial-scale climatic cycles caused hydrate formation and dissociation and that hydrate instability should be expected in a warming world.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 4
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    AAPG
    In:  AAPG Bulletin, 90 (5). pp. 771-786.
    Publication Date: 2020-04-22
    Description: The term ldquomud volcano systemrdquo is coined to describe the set of structures associated with a constructional edifice (mud volcano) and feeder complex that connects the volcano to its source stratigraphic unit. Three-dimensional (3-D) seismic data from the South Caspian Basin are used to investigate the structural elements and evolution of these systems. Mud volcano systems initiate via early, kilometer-scale, biconic edifices termed ldquopioneerrdquo cones. These are fed by fluidization pipes tens of meters in width. Subsequent kilometer-scale mud volcanoes grew via persistent extrusion, fed by numerous additional fluidization pipes injected in the country rock. This subvolcanic intrusion complex creates a densely intruded, cylindrical zone, similar in cross section to gryphon swarms observed at an outcrop onshore. Wall rock erosion and compaction of the intruded zone leads to the collapse of a downward-tapering cone enveloping the cylindrical zone, capped by ring faults that define a kilometer-scale caldera that downthrows the overlying mud volcano. Mud volcanoes get buried during basin subsidence and can look like intrusive laccoliths at first glance on seismic data. Reactivation of mud flow through a conduit system generates a stack of superimposed mud volcanoes through time. Large volcanoes continue to dewater during burial and may locally remobilize. This model of mud volcano evolution has similarities with igneous and salt tectonic systems. To reduce drilling and geologic uncertainty, mud volcano system extent and impacts on a reservoir can be assessed on 3-D seismic data.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2021-01-08
    Description: Three-dimensional seismic-reflection data are used in the analysis of submarine channel systems in the Espírito Santo Basin, Brazil. The exceptional quality of the studied data set allows the detailed documentation of the geometry, regional distribution, and statistical parameters of salt-related normal faults, and their effect on the Rio Doce Canyon system (RDCS). On the Espírito Santo continental slope, normal faulting was triggered during early halokinesis (stage A] but barely controlled the initial evolution of the RDCS, which incised the continental slope axially within a salt-withdrawal basin. However, in a second stage (stage B), crestal or radial faults controlled erosion over growing salt structures, whereas synclinal and channel-margin fault sets dissected overbank strata to the RDCS. In the later part of stage B, channel sinuosity decreased sharply in response to fault activity and associated sea-floor desta-bilization. Vertical propagation of blind faults was triggered in a third stage (stage C), in association with crestal collapse of buried salt anticlines and regional diapirism, but synclinal and channel-margin faults did not propagate vertically above a regional unconformity marking the base of stage C strata. Statistical analyses of observed fault sets demonstrate that synclinal faults are in average 2.3 times longer than the crestal or radial types but record 60% of the throw (average 83 m [272 ft]] experienced by the latter. In addition, the fault sets are shown to have contributed to local cannibalization of the sea floor, vertical stacking of channel-fill strata, and structural and deposi-tional compartmentalization of potential reservoir successions. As a result, channel systems show marked differences in mean values for sinuosity, height, and width in relation to five main phases of channel development. The structural setting in the study area differs from productive areas offshore Espirito Santo (e.g., Golfinho field), west Africa, and Gulf of Mexico, revealing in distal parts of the Brazilian margin the existence of local controls on submarine channel architecture and structural compartmentalization prior to the main stages of diapirism.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2021-11-15
    Description: We describe a three-dimensional seismic interpretation approach for identifying the past bases of the methane hydrate stability zone in marine settings. The bases commonly crosscut stratigraphic reflections, and these lines of intersection can be revealed by maps of seismic amplitude. Maps for four reflections that are crosscut by the base of the present-day offshore Mauritania methane hydrate reveal extraordinary curvilinear changes of amplitude that are parallel to one another and extend for as much as ∼20 km. They are interpreted as marking the relict intersections of the bases of the hydrate stability zone, and formed by its upward resetting. We hypothesize that this was caused by pulsed sedimentation during repeated glacial-interglacial cycles over the past ∼1.25 m.y. Localized deflections in the lines of intersection are indicative of local changes in sediment temperature. This technique could provide a wealth of information on local and regional changes in ambient conditions and better estimates of the volumes of methane being released through time. It therefore should help test for interdependencies between hydrate dissociation and climate change.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2024-01-14
    Description: Marine methane hydrate is an ice-like substance that is stable in sediment around marine continental margins where water depths are greater than ~450–700 m. The release of methane due to melting of hydrates is considered to be a mechanism for past global carbon-cycle perturbations and could exacerbate ongoing anthropogenic climate change. Increases in bottom-water temperature at the landward limit of marine hydrate around continental margins, where vulnerable hydrate exists at or below the seabed, cause methane to vent into the ocean. However, this setting represents only ~3.5% of the global hydrate reservoir. The potential for methane from hydrate in deeper water to reach the atmosphere was considered negligible. Here we use three-dimensional (3D) seismic imagery to show that, on the Mauritanian margin, methane migrated at least 40 km below the base of the hydrate stability zone and vented through 23 pockmarks at the shelf break, probably during warmer Quaternary interglacials. We demonstrate that, under suitable circumstances, some of the 96.5% of methane bound in deeper water distal hydrates can reach the seafloor and vent into the ocean beyond the landward limit of marine hydrate. This reservoir should therefore be considered for estimating climate change-induced methane release during a warming world.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2015-03-09
    Description: Surface ocean productivity mediates the transfer of carbon to the deep ocean and in the process regulates atmospheric CO 2 levels. A common axiom in oceanography is that large phytoplankton contribute disproportionally to the transfer of carbon to the deep ocean because of their greater ability to escape grazing pressure,build biomass and sink. In the present study, we assessed the relationship of net community production to phytoplankton assemblages and plankton size distribution in the Subantarctic Zone (SAZ) and northern reaches of the Polar Frontal Zone (PFZ) in the Australian sector of the Southern Ocean. We reanalyzed and synthesized previously published estimates of O 2 /Ar-net community oxygen production (NCP) and triple-O 2 isotopes-gross primary oxygen production (GPP) along with microscopic and pigment analyses of the microbial community. Overall, we found the axiom that large phytoplankton drive carbon export was not supported in this region. Mixed-layer depth-integrated NCP was correlated to particulate organic carbon (POC) concentration in the mixed layer. While lower NCP/GPP and NCP/POC values were generally associated with communities dominated by smaller plankton size (as would be expected), these communities did not preclude high values for both properties. Vigorous NCP in some regions occurred in the virtual absence of large phytoplankton (and specifically diatoms) and in communities dominated by nanoplankton and picoplankton. We also observed a positive correlation between NCP and the proportion of the phytoplankton community grazed by microheterotrophs, supporting the mediating role of grazers in carbon export. The novel combination of techniques allowed us to determine how NCP relates to upper ocean ecosystem characteristics and may lead to improved models of carbon export.
    Print ISSN: 0886-6236
    Electronic ISSN: 1944-9224
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Geography , Geosciences , Physics
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  • 9
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