Publikationsdatum:
2023-03-06
Beschreibung:
Geosphere is constantly crossed by fluid fluxes of varying flow velocity and chemical composition.
The development of gas geochemistry techniques over the last 50 years allowed of gaining a
significant understanding of gas accumulations, gas fluxes, and their geological sources.
Although gas geochemistry is a relatively recent discipline of geochemistry, advancements over
the last 2 decades in sampling, storage and analysis of gas samples have enabled gas geochemistry to
emerge as a critical scientific tool for constraining processes occurring in the geosciences. Chemical
and isotopic features of various gas species have provided critical information about their origin,
source, migration, and accumulation in specific environments, making gas geochemistry a widely
used tool in a variety of fields of geosciences, including environmental/climate problems, geohazards,
origin and evolution of rocks, as well as biogeochemical processes involving microbial activity. Due
to the economic relevance of hydrocarbons and hydrothermal gases, they have been investigated
more intensively than other gas types since very early time. Additionally, advances in our
understanding of unconventional gases such as shale and tight gas in recent decades, represent
new applications for these gas-related approaches. Over the last half-century, scientists in the field of
gas geochemistry have exchanged their findings/experiments at major international scientific
conferences organized by the International Conference on Gas Geochemistry (ICGG), the
Geochemical Society, the American Geophysical Union (AGU), the European Geosciences
Union (EGU), the American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG), and the
International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth’s Interior (IAVCEI).
Numerous applications of gas geochemistry in geology and the environment have been studied
in recent years, and the present trend confirms that Earth and Environmental Sciences are the most
promising domains for gas geochemistry applications. It is worth noting that advances in our
understanding of noble/rare gas geochemistry are more closely tied to technology achievements than
to fundamental geological knowledge. The current Research Topic has been devoted of compiling the
most recent and pertinent experiences in the various domains of gas geochemistry. 23 papers
presented but not limited in the 2019 ICGG meeting in Sicily have been accepted for publication.
Hereby it is useful to report the list of published papers by date of publications and a keyword at
the end in parentheses able to roughly identify the basic field of interest. In particular the paper by:
(1) Qin et al. reported about Genetic Types, Distribution
Patterns and Enrichment Mechanisms of Helium in
China’s Petroliferous Basins (raw materials)
(2) Xia et al. reported about The Characteristics of Organic
Carbon in the Offshore Sediments Surrounding the Leizhou
Peninsula, China (hydrocarbons)
(3) Xiaobo et al. reported about Differences on Geochemical
Characteristics and Their Implicating Significances of
Nitrogen in Coal-Derived Gas and Oil-typed Gas in China
(hydrocarbons)
(4) Wu et al. reported about Inversion Characteristics of
Hydrocarbon Gases Carbon Isotopes Varying With
Temperature and Implications for Shale Exploration
(hydrocarbons)
(5) Longo et al. reported about Black Sea Methane Flares From
the Seafloor: Tracking Outgassing by Using Passive Acoustics
(hydrocarbons)
(6) Nicula et al. reported about Geochemical Features of the
Thermal and Mineral Waters From the Apuseni Mountains
(Romania) (geothermics)
(7) Melián et al. reported about Insights from Fumarole Gas
Geochemistry on the Recent Volcanic Unrest of Pico do Fogo,
Cape Verde (volcanic risk)
(8) Nguyễn et al. reported about Radioactive Thoron 220Rn
Exhalation From Unfired Mud Building Material Into Room
Air of Earthen Dwellings (radioprotection in living
environment)
(9) Wang et al. reported about Potential Production of Carbon
Gases and Their Responses to Paleoclimate Conditions: An
Example From Xiaolongtan Basin, Southeast Tibetan
Plateau (hydrocarbons)
(10) Chen et al. reported about Factors Controlling Natural Gas
Accumulation in the Southern Margin of Junggar Basin and
Potential Exploration Targets (hydrocarbon)
(11) Liang et al. reported about Preliminary Experimental Study
of Methane Adsorption Capacity in Shale After Brittle
Deformation Under Uniaxial Compression (hydrocarbons)
(12) Ni et al. reported about Geochemical Comparison of the
Deep Gases From the Sichuan and Tarim Basins, China
(hydrocarbons)
(13) Daskalopoulou et al. reported about Insight Into Hartoušov
Mofette, Czech Republic: Tales by the Fluids (tectonophysics)
(14) Gao et al. reported about Characteristics of Organic Matter
and Biomarkers in Core Sediments From the Offshore
Area of Leizhou Peninsula, South China Sea
(hydrocarbons)
(15) Cao et al. reported about The Paleoclimate Significance of
the δ13C Composition of Individual Hydrocarbon
Compounds in the Maoming Oil Shales, China
(hydrocarbons)
(16) Zhang et al. reported about Geochemical Characteristics of
Gas and Flowback Water in Lake Facies Shale: A Case Study
From the Junggar Basin, China (hydrocarbons)
(17) Sun et al. reported about Soil Degassing From the
Xianshuihe–Xiaojiang Fault System at the Eastern
Boundary of the Chuan–Dian Rhombic Block, Southwest
China (tectonophysics)
(18) Xiaowei et al. reported about Catalytic Hydrogenation of
Post-Mature Hydrocarbon Source Rocks Under Deep-
Derived Fluids: An Example of Early Cambrian Yurtus
Formation, Tarim Basin, NW China (hydrocarbons)
(19) Fu et al. reported about An Automatic System for
Continuous Monitoring and Sampling of Groundwater
Geochemistry in Earthquake-Prone Regions of SW Taiwan
(tectonophysics)
(20) Kim et al. reported about Short-Term Monitoring of
Geogenic Soil CO2 Flux in a Non-Volcanic and
Seismically Inactive Emission Site, South Korea
(tectonophysics)
(21) Sano et al. reported about Groundwater Anomaly Related to
CCS-CO2 Injection and the 2018 Hokkaido Eastern Iburi
Earthquake in Japan (carbon capture and storage)
(22) Siino et al. reported about Stochastic Models for Radon Daily
Time Series: Seasonality, Stationarity, and Long-Range
Dependence Detection (data processing)
(23) Zafrir et al. reported about The Impact of Atmospheric and
Tectonic Constraints on Radon-222 and Carbon Dioxide
Flow in Geological Porous Media—A Dozen-Year Research
Summary (tectonophysics)
Beschreibung:
Published
Beschreibung:
936733
Beschreibung:
6V. Pericolosità vulcanica e contributi alla stima del rischio
Beschreibung:
JCR Journal
Repository-Name:
Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
Materialart:
article
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