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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2023-01-27
    Description: Abrupt fluid emissions from shallow marine sediments pose a threat to seafloor installations like wind farms and offshore cables. Quantifying such fluid emissions and linking pockmarks, the seafloor manifestations of fluid escape, to flow in the sub‐seafloor remains notoriously difficult due to an incomplete understanding of the underlying physical processes. Here, using a compositional multi‐phase flow model, we test plausible gas sources for pockmarks in the south‐eastern North Sea, which recent observations suggest have formed in response to major storms. We find that the mobilization of pre‐existing gas pockets is unlikely because free gas, due to its high compressibility, damps the propagation of storm‐induced pressure changes deeper into the subsurface. Rather, our results point to spontaneous appearance of a free gas phase via storm‐induced gas exsolution from pore fluids. This mechanism is primarily driven by the pressure‐sensitivity of gas solubility, and the appearance of free gas is largely confined to sediments in the vicinity of the seafloor. We show that in highly permeable sediments containing gas‐rich pore fluids, wave‐induced pressure changes result in the appearance of a persistent gas phase. This suggests that seafloor fluid escape structures are not always proxies for overpressured shallow gas and that periodic seafloor pressure changes can induce persistent free gas phase to spontaneously appear.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: Thousands of pockmarks, circular depressions in the seafloor, were reported in North Sea, presumably formed in response to wave motions during major storms. It has been hypothesized that these pockmarks formed as pre‐existing shallow free‐gas pockets were mobilized by pressure changes of the waves. However, mechanisms that could have mobilized free‐gas are not yet constrained. Moreover, large scale free‐gas accumulations have not been reported in this region, and therefore, commonly invoked mechanisms like tensile failure and breaching of capillary seals are hard to justify as they rely on the presence of pre‐existing gas pockets. Here, through modeling studies, we tackle the question of the source of the observed free‐gas. Our study consists of two parts: First, assuming that some hitherto unknown shallow free‐gas pocket is indeed present, we test whether storm‐induced pressure changes could breach capillary seals. We find that free‐gas damps pressure changes due to its high compressibility, making the mobilization of pre‐existing gas unlikely. In the second part, we propose an alternative mechanism where free‐gas spontaneously appears due to exsolution from pore‐fluids. We test the feasibility of this mechanism and show how periodic pressure changes can lead to a persistent gas phase, that could explain the elusive gas source linked to these pockmarks.
    Description: Key Points: Storm‐induced pressure changes can lead to spontaneous appearance of free gas phase near the seafloor. This process is driven by pressure‐sensitive phase instabilities. This mechanism could help explain elusive gas sources in recently observed pockmarks in the North Sea.
    Description: Aker BP (AkerBP) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100016998
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG
    Keywords: ddc:550 ; pockmarks ; storm related pockmarks ; spontaneous free gas ; gas source ; modeling
    Language: English
    Type: doc-type:article
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2017-11-13
    Print ISSN: 0169-3913
    Electronic ISSN: 1573-1634
    Topics: Geosciences , Technology
    Published by Springer
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2008-03-01
    Description: We present a generic algorithm for automating sedimentary basin reconstruction. Automation is achieved through the coupling of a two-dimensional thermotectonostratigraphic forward model to an inverse scheme that updates the model parameters until the input stratigraphy is fitted to a desired accuracy. The forward model solves for lithospheric thinning, flexural isostasy, sediment deposition, and transient heat flow. The inverse model updates the crustal- and mantle-thinning factors and paleowater depth. Both models combined allow for automated forward modeling of the structural and thermal evolution of extensional sedimentary basins. The potential and robustness of this method is demonstrated through a reconstruction case study of the northern Viking Graben in the North Sea. This reconstruction fits present stratigraphy, borehole temperatures, vitrinite reflectance data, and paleowater depth. The predictive power of the model is illustrated through the successful identification of possible targets along the transect, where the principal source rocks are in the oil and gas windows. These locations coincide well with known oil and gas occurrences. The key benefits of the presented algorithm are as follows: (1) only standard input data are required, (2) crustal- and mantle-thinning factors and paleowater depth are automatically computed, and (3) sedimentary basin reconstruction is greatly facilitated and can thus be more easily integrated into basin analysis and exploration risk assessment. Lars Helmuth Rüpke is a professor for sea-floor resources at the research cluster “The Future Ocean” at IFM-GEOMAR in Kiel, Germany. Before moving to Kiel, he was a senior researcher at Physics of Geological Processes at Oslo University, Norway. His present research focuses on passive margins, sedimentary basins, and fluid migration pattern through the Earth's crust. Stefan Markus Schmalholz is a senior researcher and lecturer at the Geological Institute of the Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule (ETH) Zurich, Switzerland. His present research focuses on folding and necking instabilities in rocks, low-frequency wave propagation in porous rocks, and numerical modeling of rock deformation. He holds a Ph.D. in natural sciences and a diploma in earth sciences both from ETH Zurich. Daniel Walter Schmid is a senior researcher and coordinator of the microstructures group at the Physics of Geological Processes at Oslo University, Norway. His present research focuses on small-scale rock deformation, coupling between chemical reactions and deformation, and the development of efficient numerical models. He holds a Ph.D. in geology from the ETH Zurich, Switzerland. Yuri Y. Podladchikov is a professor at Oslo University and Physics of Geological Processes.
    Print ISSN: 0149-1423
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-2674
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 4
  • 5
    Publication Date: 2007-06-01
    Print ISSN: 0954-4879
    Electronic ISSN: 1365-3121
    Topics: Geosciences
    Published by Wiley
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2011-04-16
    Print ISSN: 0094-8276
    Electronic ISSN: 1944-8007
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2017-06-01
    Description: The potential of mining seafloor massive sulfide deposits for metals such as Cu, Zn, and Au is currently debated. One key challenge is to predict where the largest deposits worth mining might form, which in turn requires understanding the pattern of subseafloor hydrothermal mass and energy transport. Numerical models of heat and fluid flow are applied to illustrate the important role of fault zone properties (permeability and width) in controlling mass accumulation at hydrothermal vents at slow spreading ridges. We combine modeled mass-flow rates, vent temperatures, and vent field dimensions with the known fluid chemistry at the fault-controlled Logatchev 1 hydrothermal field of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. We predict that the 135 kilotons of SMS at this site (estimated by other studies) can have accumulated with a minimum depositional efficiency of 5% in the known duration of hydrothermal venting (58,200 year age of the deposit). In general, the most productive faults must provide an efficient fluid pathway while at the same time limit cooling due to mixing with entrained cold seawater. This balance is best met by faults that are just wide and permeable enough to control a hydrothermal plume rising through the oceanic crust. Model runs with increased basal heat input, mimicking a heat flow contribution from along-axis, lead to higher mass fluxes and vent temperatures, capable of significantly higher SMS accumulation rates. Nonsteady state conditions, such as the influence of a cooling magmatic intrusion beneath the fault zone, also can temporarily increase the mass flux while sustaining high vent temperatures. © 2017. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
    Electronic ISSN: 1525-2027
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Geosciences , Physics
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2009-10-01
    Description: Basement heat flow is one of the key unknowns in sedimentary basin analysis. Its quantification is challenging not in the least due to the various feedback mechanisms between the basin and lithosphere processes. This study explores two main feedbacks, sediment blanketing and thinning of sediments during lithospheric stretching, in a series of synthetic models and a reconstruction case study from the Norwegian Sea. Three types of basin models are used: (1) a newly developed one-dimensional (1D) forward model, (2) a decompaction/backstripping approach and (3) the commercial basin modelling software TECMOD2D for automated forward basin reconstructions. The blanketing effect of sedimentation is reviewed and systematically studied in a suite of 1D model runs. We find that even for moderate sedimentation rates (0.5 mm year-1), basement heat flow is depressed by ~25% with respect to the case without sedimentation; for high sedimentation rates (1.5 mm year-1), basement heat flow is depressed by ~50%. We have further compared different methods for computing sedimentation rates from the presently observed stratigraphy. Here, we find that decompaction/backstripping-based methods may systematically underestimate sedimentation rates and total subsidence. The reason for this is that sediments are thinned during lithosphere extension in forward basin models while there are not in backstripping/decompaction approaches. The importance of sediment blanketing and differences in modelling approaches is illustrated in a reconstruction case study from the Norwegian Sea. The thermal and structural evolution of a transect across the Vøring Basin has been reconstructed using the backstripping/decompaction approach and TECMOD2D. Computed total subsidence curves differ by up to ~3 km and differences in computed basement heat flows reach up to 50%. These findings show that strong feedbacks exist between basin and lithosphere processes and that resolving them require integrated lithosphere-scale basin models. © 2009 The Authors. Basin Research © 2009 Blackwell Publishing Ltd, European Association of Geoscientists & Engineers and International Association of Sedimentologists.
    Print ISSN: 0950-091X
    Electronic ISSN: 1365-2117
    Topics: Geosciences
    Published by Wiley
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2020-11-19
    Description: Numerical models have become indispensable tools for investigating submarine hydrothermal systems and for relating seafloor observations to physicochemical processes at depth. Particularly useful are multiphase models that account for phase separation phenomena, so that model predictions can be compared to observed variations in vent fluid salinity. Yet, the numerics of multiphase flow remain a challenge. Here we present a novel hydrothermal flow model for the system H2O–NaCl able to resolve multiphase flow over the full range of pressure, temperature, and salinity variations that are relevant to submarine hydrothermal systems. The method is based on a 2-D finite volume scheme that uses a Newton–Raphson algorithm to couple the governing conservation equations and to treat the non-linearity of the fluid properties. The method uses pressure, specific fluid enthalpy, and bulk fluid salt content as primary variables, is not bounded to the Courant time step size, and allows for a direct control of how accurately mass and energy conservation is ensured. In a first application of this new model, we investigate brine formation and mobilization in hydrothermal systems driven by a transient basal temperature boundary condition—analogue to seawater circulation systems found at mid-ocean ridges. We find that basal heating results in the rapid formation of a stable brine layer that thermally insulates the driving heat source. While this brine layer is stable under steady-state conditions, it can be mobilized as a consequence of variations in heat input leading to brine entrainment and the venting of highly saline fluids.
    Print ISSN: 0169-3913
    Electronic ISSN: 1573-1634
    Topics: Geosciences , Technology
    Published by Springer
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2022-03-21
    Description: We reanalyze existing paleodata of global mean surface temperature ΔTg and radiative forcing ΔR of CO2 and land ice albedo for the last 800,000 years to show that a state‐dependency in paleoclimate sensitivity S, as previously suggested, is only found if ΔTg is based on reconstructions, and not when ΔTg is based on model simulations. Furthermore, during times of decreasing obliquity (periods of land ice sheet growth and sea level fall) the multimillennial component of reconstructed ΔTg diverges from CO2, while in simulations both variables vary more synchronously, suggesting that the differences during these times are due to relatively low rates of simulated land ice growth and associated cooling. To produce a reconstruction‐based extrapolation of S for the future, we exclude intervals with strong ΔTg‐CO2 divergence and find that S is less state‐dependent, or even constant state‐independent), yielding a mean equilibrium warming of 2–4 K for a doubling of CO2.
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: application/pdf
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