Title :
Geological controls on the gas hydrate system of Formosa Ridge, South China Sea
Author :
Berndt, C. ; Crutchley, Gareth ; Klaucke, I. ; Jegen, M. ; Lebas, E. ; Muff, S. ; Lieser, K. ; Roth, T. ; Chi, W.-C. ; Feseker, T. ; Lin, Shunjiang ; Liu, Char-Shine ; Chen, Luo-nan ; Hsu, H.-H.
Author_Institution :
GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Res. Kiel, Kiel, Germany
Abstract :
Formosa Ridge is one of many topographic ridges created by canyon incision into the eastern South China Sea margin. The northwestern termination of the ridge is caused by beheading of the ridge due to a westward shift of the canyon that originally formed to the eastern flank of Formosa Ridge. Below Formosa Ridge a bottom simulating reflector (BSR) exists. Its depth below sea floor coincides with the theoretical base of the gas hydrate stability zone and the reflection has reverse polarity suggesting that it is caused by free gas below gas hydrate accumulations. The BSR is ubiquitous but shows significant variations in depth below sea floor ranging from 150 ms TWT (or approximately 180 m) underneath the incised canyon in the north to up to 500 ms (or approximately 460 m) underneath the crest of Formosa Ridge. Predominantly this depth variation is the result of topography on subsurface temperature, but comparison with the average BSR depth underneath the surrounding canyons suggests that recent canyon incision in the north has perturbed the thermal state of the sediments. Formosa Ridge consists of a northern half that is dominated by refilled older canyons and a southern half that consists mainly of contourite deposits. However, judging by the reflection seismic data this difference in origin seems to have little effect on the distribution of gas hydrate.
Keywords :
hydrocarbon reservoirs; ocean temperature; seafloor phenomena; sediments; Formosa ridge; bottom simulating reflector; canyon westward shift; contourite deposits; eastern South China Sea margin; free gas; gas hydrate accumulations; gas hydrate stability zone; gas hydrate system; geological controls; reflection seismic data; ridge northwestern termination; sea floor; sediment thermal state; subsurface temperature; topographic ridges; Geology; Ocean temperature; Reflection; Sea floor; Sediments; Thermal stability; Three-dimensional displays; gas hydrate; heat flow; sedimentary systems;
Conference_Titel :
OCEANS 2014 - TAIPEI
Conference_Location :
Taipei
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-3645-8
DOI :
10.1109/OCEANS-TAIPEI.2014.6964481