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The Nature of Gas Hydrates
on the Nigerian Continental Slope
James M.
Brooks (TDI-Brooks International, Inc.)
William
R. Bryant (Department of Oceanography, Texas A&M University)
Bernie
B. Bernard (TDI-Brooks International, Inc.)
Nick
R. Cameron (United Kingdom representative for TDI-Brooks
International, Inc. and GeoMark Research, Inc.)
For publication in: Annals of the New York Academy of
Sciences
Third International Conference on Gas Hydrates
July 18-22, 1999, Park City, Utah
Version: 16 July 1999
Abstract
Introduction
Nigerian Margin Geological
Setting
Sea Floor Gas Hydrate
Collections
Geographic Distribution
Hydrate Origin
and Gas on the Nigerian Margin
Bottom Simulating Reflectors
Regional Heat Flow and
Geothermal Gradient on the Nigerian Margin
Acknowledgements
References
Tables
Figures
Abstract
Gas hydrates have been collected in 6-meter
piston cores during surface geochemical exploration (SGE)
surveys in the deep and ultra deepwaters of Nigeria in 1991,
1996, and 1998. To date, gas hydrates have been collected
in ~21 cores out of the >800 core collections on the Nigerian
margin. This represents a 2.5% recovery ratio of gas hydrated
cores on this margin at sites that are potential conduits
for the upward migration of hydrocarbons (i.e., core locations
are sited based on 2-D and 3-D seismic over faults, mounds,
acoustic wipe-outs, etc.). Unlike the northern Gulf of Mexico
where the authors have retrieved a significant percentage
of thermogenic hydrates in piston cores, all the gas hydrate
collections offshore Nigeria to date have been primarily biogenic
in nature (methane >99% of the hydrocarbon gases;d
13C generally light, -60 to –117 0/00).
A few of these gas hydrated sites do contain a mixed thermogenic
gas component (ethane to butane gases up to a few hundred
ppm of total hydrocarbon gas), but even at these sites the
primary gas in the hydrates is methane.
There is migration of liquid hydrocarbons
to shallow sediments that is common on the Nigerian continental
margin. For example, a SGE coring survey on the Nigerian ultra
deep water continental margin in 1996 collected 10 cores out
of 130 with visible liquid hydrocarbons within portions of
the 4.0 to 5.0 meters of sediment generally retrieved by the
piston cores. However, in many cases there is little gas associated
with these sites and the collection of gas hydrated cores
is generally independent of the macroseepage of liquid hydrocarbon
core sites. Bottom Simulating Reflectors (BSRs) are often
associated with the marcoseepage core sites in Nigeria. BSRs
are common on the seismic records of the Nigerian continental
slope. The subbottom depth of the BSRs range between ~200
to ~500 meters and are often associated with various geological
structures such as faults. When gas hydrates are collected
in cores they often consist of disseminated nodules of a few
centimeters in diameter within the mud matrix a few meters
subbottom or are massive (5 to 10+ cm thick) and come up as
the bottom of the core. The depth of the BSRs are generally
similar or at shallow depths than the calculated base of the
methane hydrate stability zone using known bottom water temperatures
and thermal gradients for the region. The average heat flow
for the Nigerian continental margin is 58.2 mW/m2
with a range from 18.8 to 123 m/Wm2.
Introduction
Although gas hydrates have been known to
exist in upper continental shelf sediments for many years
(1,2), they have not been commonly collected. The global distribution
of gas hydrates has been deduced primarily from bottom simulating
reflectors (BSRs) and the occasional collection, generally
hundreds of meters deep in the subsurface in deep-sea drilling
(i.e., DSDP and ODP) cores. Brooks and co-workers (3-8) have
documented the occurrence of gas hydrates in shallow subsurface
marine sediments overlying several of the hydrocarbon generative
basins throughout the world (i.e., Gulf of Mexico, northern
California and offshore Nigeria). The gas hydrates have generally
been collected from the upper 5 meters of piston cores taken
in water depths greater than 400 m. These gas hydrates occur
in close proximity to faults and other conduits for gas migration.
In the Gulf of Mexico, biogenic and thermogenic hydrates have
been observed from submersibles to outcrop at the seafloor
(7, 9). The observations of gas hydrates at the seafloor in
water depths near their upper stability zone suggests that
slight changes in bottom water temperature or pressure could
cause the hydrates to disassociate and thereby dramatically
increase the release of gas to the ocean surface. It is not
clear to what degree shallow hydrates act as barriers to the
seepage of gas from the seafloor because bubbling gas seeps
are common in areas containing extensive shallow hydrates
(5, 10).
Nigerian
Margin Geological Setting
The Niger Delta occupies the central region
of West Africa’s Gulf of Guinea. With a land area of some
75,000 km2 it forms the largest delta system in
Africa (11). The delta owes its size to the focus provided
by the Benue arm of the Niger Triple Junction for sediment
delivery from interior Africa to the Atlantic Ocean. The modern
delta began its growth in the late Eocene (12, 13). Since
that time the delta top, as defined by the 200 meter isobath,
has prograded south and south-westwards from the Cretaceous
shelf-edge hinge line some 300 km across previously deepwater
settings. The distal edge of the delta lies some 80 to 170
km further seawards. The continental slope forms the intermediate
region and has been the focus of SGE cores containing the
hydrates reported here.
The Eocene and younger delta succession is
divided into three younger units moving seaward. These are,
from the bottom upwards, the Akata Formation, the Agbada Formation
and the Benin Formation (13). The Akata Formation comprises
deep marine shales and, as was predicted more than twenty-five
years ago, deepwater sands (12). Shelf to paralic sediments
define the Agbada Formation and the uppermost unit, the Benin
Formation, consists of primarily non-marine, delta top sands
and clays. Delta top loading has been sufficient to mobilize
the Akata Formation clays and the entire 10-12 km succession
is being actively displaced oceanwards. The result is a generally
clearly defined frontal toe thrust (14) behind which are stacked
clay cored diapir belts associated with the lateral translation
of the delta slope towards the ocean. Doust and Omatsola (13)
and more recently by Cohen and McClay (15) provide a comprehensive
account of the history of development of the delta in terms
of depobelts.
The modern anatomy of the delta is summarized
on Fig. 1. Superimposed are the oil
producing region and some of the most significant of the deepwater
discoveries. Our own work based on piston-core recovered oils
collected in 1996 and 1998, together with comparisons with
offshore and nearshore produced oils, indicates that the predominant
offshore source, at least to present exploration limits, is
a mid-Tertiary or younger marine claystone with strong deltaic
influences (although Cretaceous-sourced seeps are present
locally). These oils and seeps group to form GeoMark’s Tertiary
Deltaic Oil Family (16) regarded as derived from the Akata
Formation. The mixed Type II/III source rocks which would
supply these oils and the accompanying gases have been described
from the Akata Formation to the west of Bioko Island in Equatorial
Guinea (17). Mixed oil and gas prone kerogens are also described
from the Bonga discovery in OPL 212 and the Ngolo-1 well in
OPL 219 (18). Little is known concerning the younger Cretaceous
and older Tertiary source rocks, although their presence is
suspected beneath the slope given that source rocks of this
age are developed. Considering the prevalence of mature oil
seepage to shallow sediments and the large oil/gas discoveries
occurring along the continental margin, there are multiple
possible sources of gas to the hydrate stability zone.
Sea
Floor Gas Hydrate Collections
The initial hydrate discoveries in the Gulf
of Mexico, offshore West Africa, northern California and elsewhere
have resulted from piston cores acquired for the purpose of
geochemical exploration. SGE studies are used to define the
aerial distribution of oil, condensate and gas seepage on
the continental margin. These studies high grade areas and
prospects by defining areas of active oil migration and charge
through gas and high molecular weight hydrocarbon analysis
methods. This active migration acts to charge accompanying
reservoirs in the same geological system. From many such studies,
especially in Tertiary delta systems in west Africa, the Gulf
of Mexico and elsewhere, we know that there is considerable
macroseepage of ‘live’ oil and gas into seafloor sediments
throughout broad regions from the shelf/slope break extending
to the ultra deep waters (>1,500 m).
Core locations for SGE studies are chosen
from both 2-D and 3-D seismic data where there are possibly
deep conduits (i.e., faults and fractures) for the upward
migration of hydrocarbons. The optimum targets are deep cutting
faults that link the source succession to the seabed. These
are best developed where there is ongoing tectonism, for example
in clay diapir or salt tectonic provinces. However, even in
tectonically quiet regions breaks are usually present, especially
where the section is thick and/or where there has been differential
movement and reactivation across basement features such the
Benue and Charcot Fracture Zones in Nigeria. The ideal faults
are those associated with: (1) amplitude anomalies ("flags")
and/or BSRs, (2) seabed constructional features such as carbonate
accumulations and mud-gas mounds, (3) gas vent pits, and (4)
gas chimneys. Thus, the sites chosen for SGE studies are very
focused to optimise the chance for retrieving upward migrated
gaseous and liquid hydrocarbons.
Cores are acquired with a 900 kg piston corer
with collapsible piston, 6-meter of pipe and core liner. All
cores are positioned with differential GPS positioning to
a precision of ±5 meters, generally within ±30 meters of preselected
locations. Often either precision bathymetric or subbottom
(3.5 kHz or Chirp sonar) profiling is used to further refine
core positions in the field. Seismic data acquired by Mabon
Limited was used for both the 1996 and 1998 Nigerian programs
discussed below. Core site selection is enhanced where 3-D
seismic and/or swath bathymetry are available.
Gas hydrates are recognized visually in many
of the cores upon retrieval on deck as most often white ice-like
nodules or lenses in the core. They are also inferred by large
gas expansion pockets in some cores upon retrieval on the
ship’s deck. If large gas nodules are present, the hydrate
is sometimes placed in a 23-cc Parr bomb to collect the hydrate
decomposition gas into a high pressure cylinder (8). In our
SGE studies, all the cores are sampled at three depths in
the bottom half of the core for headspace gas. Headspace gas
analysis refers to the determination of interstitial light
hydrocarbon gases (C1-C5). The light
hydrocarbon gases are not very soluble in water, so they can
be extracted from a sediment by a gas/water partitioning procedure
(19).
Geographic
Distribution
The Gulf of Mexico has been the most geographically
prolific area for collection of gas hydrates in near surface
sediments. Gas hydrates were first collected in shallow cores
in the Gulf of Mexico in 1984 during surface geochemical exploration
programs conducted by the author (4). The Gulf of Mexico remains
one of the few documented site of predominantly thermogenic
gas hydrate collections in shallow cores. There have been
numerous gas hydrate collections in the Gulf of Mexico (3-9).
Table 1 documents the sites where
the authors have collected cores for SGE programs and the
estimated number of gas-hydrated cores obtained. The table
shows that there is more than double the chance in water depths
>500 meters of obtaining a gas-hydrated core in the Central/Eastern
Gulf compared to Nigeria (6.6% vs. 2.5%). Although this is
no doubt geologically controlled, it may also be skewed in
that more sites in the Gulf were targeted based on 3-D seismic
data whereas most of the sites elsewhere (i.e., West Africa
and offshore California) were target based on 2-D seismic
data. Clearly, targeting core locations based on 3-D seismic
data increases ones ability to select the best locations for
hitting upward migrated hydrocarbons in shallow sediments
using deep fault extensions into shallow sediments along with
amplitude anomalies and edge maps.
Brooks et al. (5) noted that collections
of shallow gas hydrates in the Gulf ranged in water depths
from 439 to 1360 meters, although Anderson et al. (20) have
shown that thermogenic gas hydrates could exist in water depths
as shallow as 220 meters. Table 2
lists locations of some additional hydrate sites in the Gulf
of Mexico to water depths of 2,324 meters. In the Gulf, most
thermogenic hydrates have been recovered in the 400 to 800
meter depth range, while biogenic hydrates predominate at
greater water depths. Table 2 shows
the carbon isotopic content of recent hydrates collections
in the Gulf of Mexico in depths >1,000 meters to be biogenic
in nature. The gas hydrates recovered at seven sites between
water depths of 510 and 642 m offshore northern California
in the Eel River Basin (Table 1)
also were predominantly biogenic gas (6).
Tables 1 and 3
indicated that 21 gas hydrated cores have been acquired in
three surveys consisting of >800 cores in water depths
>500 meters offshore Nigeria. Fig. 2
shows the locations of the Nigerian gas hydrate collections.
The sites ranged in water depths from 440 to 1,528 meters.
While most of the cores had small, dispersed, gas hydrates
either throughout the core or in the bottom of the cores,
several cores bottomed into a massive hydrate 10 to 15 cm
in thickness that came up plugging the end of the core. All
Nigerian gas hydrates were white, contained mostly methane,
and were found predominately in clay-rich sediment. All the
hydrated cores contained hydrogen sulifde gas indicating anoxic
conditions. Since most sediments on the slope are not anoxic
in the top 3-4 meters subbottom, the presence of H2S
in the hydrated cores indicates active bacterial sulfate reduction
has occurred possibly using the gaseous hydrocarbons as the
subtrate.
An interesting feature is the often noted
shallow seafloor depression at gas-hydrated core sites.
Fig. 3 shows a Chirp subbottom record across a gas hydrated
site in over 1,300 meters of water. The core site was chosen
because the 2-D seismic indicated a fault at this location
possibly reaching the seafloor. The subbottom profile indicated
by the turbid nature of the seismic record that the surficial
sediments at this location are gassy. The core was retrieved
slightly upslope of an active fault.
Hydrate
Origin and Gas on the Nigerian Margin
The nature of the hydrate gas offshore
Nigeria can be inferred from the examination of headspace
gases obtained from the shallow piston cores. Table
4 shows the headspace gas concentration in the cores containing
the gas hydrates. Unless noted otherwise, the values are the
average of three measurements in the bottom half of each core.
The C1/(C2+C3) ratios indicate
that the molecular compositions are mostly biogenic gas (22),
although small thermogenic components might be present at
locations with C1/(C2+C3)
ratios less than 1,000. With one exception, methane makes
up greater than 99% of the hydrocarbon gases. This is consistent
with other headspace gas carbon isotopic ratios from high
gas containing cans from these same Nigerian SGE surveys (Table
5). Table 5 lists the carbon isotope
values reported as d13CPDB (o/oo)
measured in alkane gases of concentration greater than 500
ppmV in the headspace of the selected cans from the 1998 program.
The data in Table 5 with values more
negative (lighter) than -100 o/oo represent
cores that contain only biogenic gas. Whereas thermogenic
gas is typically represented by d13CPDB of
methane from -40 to -50 o/oo, values
between -50 to -85 o/oo are routinely
observed in sediment gases with higher-than-biogenic levels
of C2+ alkane gases. We interpret these sites as
having some component of thermogenic gas mixed with predominately
biogenic gas. This small component of thermogenic gas does
not change the basic biogenic nature of the gas hydrated cores.
The distribution of the alkane gases obtained
from ~230 cores taken in the ultra deep water (generally >1,500
meters water depth) is shown in Fig. 4.
The figure illustrates that 92% of the samples contain sediment
light hydrocarbon alkane gases totalling less than 100 ppmV.
Concentrations ranging from 1 to 100 ppmV total alkane gases
in these marine sediments are considered background, with
the predominant hydrocarbon gas being methane in all samples.
Fig. 4 shows that of the remaining
8% (55 total) "above-background" samples, 36 contain
alkane gases totaling 100 to 1,000 ppmV and 19 more contain
alkane gases totaling more than 1,000 ppmV. Light hydrocarbon
concentrations greater than 100 ppmV may be indicating upward
migrating thermogenic gas.
Fig. 5 shows the occurrence
of the non-methane (C2+) alkane gases in the sediment
samples. The figure illustrates that 93% of the samples contain
C2+ alkane gases totaling less than 2 ppmV. The
remaining 45 samples contain C2+ alkane gases totaling
2 ppmV or more. Concentrations ranging from 0.02 to 2 ppmV
C2+ alkane are considered background for marine
sediments in this area. The natural presence of high levels
of C2+ alkane gases serves as a good indicator
of migrating thermally-sourced gas, because C2-C5
alkanes are not microbially produced at these levels in marine
sediments. However, the absence of high levels of the C2+
alkane gases does not necessarily mean that thermogenically-sourced
gas is not present.
Fig. 6 illustrates
the range of concentrations of light hydrocarbon alkane gases
in the sediments from both the 1996 and 1998 Nigerian studies
by comparing the values of the non-methane (C2+)
component of the alkane gases to the values of the total alkane
gases for each core section. Typical background levels of
total-alkane-gases range from about 1 to 100 ppmV, whereas
typical concentrations of C2+ hydrocarbons range
from about 0.02 to 2 ppmV. Because we are reporting gas data
by volume rather than by mass, the 1%, 20%, and 100% lines
represent percent-by-volume boundaries. Volumes of gases are
proportional to their mole quantities; therefore, these lines
also represent mole fractions of 1%, 20%, and 100%. Note that
a value of 100% means that essentially all of the gas is C2+,
with insignificant fractions of methane. Mole fractions of
the C2+ alkane gases from 1% to 20% in a produced
or seeping natural gas would be indicative of a thermogenic
"wet gas" origin for the gas, but in marine sediments the
normal background levels of ethane and propane are typically
high enough with respect to the background methane to produce
these percentages. Such mole fractions, without further indicators,
are not extraordinary. However, when the non-methane alkane
fraction falls in this range and the methane concentration
is high compared to background, then the sample deserves further
consideration as having a thermogenic component.
Figs. 7 and 8
show the distribution of C2+ alkanes greater than
100 ppmV and the presence of hydrogen sulfide in the core
bottom relative to the BSRs mapped by Cunningham et al. (21).
Most of the high gas containing cores are outside of the areas
of mapped BSRs possibly indicating that the hydrate could
form a partial barrier to the upward migration of gas. However,
an examination of the seismic data at sites were macroseepage
of liquid hydrocarbons exist in the ultra deep water (Fig.
9) show that BSRs are generally present. Thus, we do not
believe that the BSRs are acting as a significant barrier
for the upward migration of liquid and therefore gaseous hydrocarbons
along deep cutting faults on the slope. No gas hydrated cores
(Table 3) contained visible liquid
hydrocarbons, although several contained significant amounts
of liquid hydrocarbon microseepage (i.e., liquid hydrocarbons
only detected analytically). In general, the presence of gas
hydrated cores on the Nigerian margin is decoupled from the
seepage of liquid hydrocarbons to the seafloor which is consistent
with the biogenic nature of the gas hydrates. The presence
of reducing conditions in the cores as indicated by the presence
of hydrogen sulfide in the bottoms of the cores did not show
any coupling with the presence of the BSRs (Fig.
8).
Bottom
Simulating Reflectors
Fig. 9 shows an example
of a BSR over a macroseepage core site offshore Nigeria. Cunningham
et al. (21) have mapped the BSRs using 2-D regional seismic
data offshore West Africa and reported that BSRs are extensive
on the continental margin off the Niger and Congo River Delta,
but absent elsewhere in the Nigerian to Angolan corridor of
west Africa. This corresponds to the collection of gas hydrates
reported here offshore Nigeria in shallow cores but the complete
lack of any shallow gas hydrate collections offshore Angola
in >1,300 cores collected using the same techniques and
core settings as used in Nigeria (Table
3). Cunningham et al. (21) reports that the cumulative
surface area of BSR areas offshore Nigeria and Congo are 11,000
and 4,000 km2, respectively. Fig.
2 shows the sites of gas hydrate core collections offshore
Nigeria and the correspondence with the BSRs reported by Cunningham
et al. (21). An amazing observations is that most of the seafloor
collections of gas hydrates are shoreward of the major BSR
trends, despite the fact that many cores were obtained over
faults in the BSR regions.
In Nigeria, the BSRs are generally associated
with complex structural types that are contractional in origin
(i.e., imbricated and fault-related folds) in water depths
greater than 1,200 meters (10, 21). Hovland et al. (10) reports
from his studies in the OPL-213/215 area that the BSRs cover
8.5% of the study area and tend to follow the up dipping strata
formed by the anticlinal compressional ramp structures, where
the mud volcanoes tend to form at the summit of these ramps.
Our examination of the BSRs along the Nigerian margin generally
correspond to those areas identified by Cunningham et al.
(21) and Hovland et al. (10). The BSRs are common along the
distal portions of the prodelta where large thrust faults
create bathymetric highs adjacent to the flat Atlantic seafloor.
Fig. 10 illustrates the relationship
of an extensive BSR to a large thrust fault. The BSR occurs
at approximately 500 meters below the seafloor and the water
depth is 2400 meters. There is little blanking above the BSR
at this location. Fig. 11 is a 2-D
seismic profile that illustrates the nature of occurrence
of an extensive BSR in water depths of 1350 meters. The BSR
is 300 milliseconds two-way travel-time below the seafloor,
which is approximately 270 meters at a sediment velocity of
1800 m/sec. The BSR is above and on the flanks of a diapiric
structure. There is extensive blanking above and below the
BSR. Fig. 12 illustrates the development
of a well-defined BSR in water depths of 1800 meters and 175
milliseconds twtt below the seafloor. The BSR extends below
a seafloor depression and there is extensive blanking above
the BSR.
The water depth and the depth below the seafloor
of BSR’s in the offshore portions of Nigeria determined from
an extensive 2-D regional seismic survey is presented in Fig.
13. The equation for the line of best fit was determined
to be:
Water Depth (sec twtt) = 0.2647 + 5.6593 BSR
Depth Below Seafloor (sec twtt)
This equation has an R2 value
of 0.76. The BSRs depths graphed in Fig.
13 are at similar geographic locations to those presented
by Cummingham et al. (21) and shown in Fig.
2.
Hovland et al. (10) concluded that the mean
maximum amount of gas hydrates and free gas residing in sediments
above and below the Nigerian BSRs is 1-3% and 1-5% by volume,
respectively. They argue that BSRs and natural gas hydrates
form at locations where there is a relatively high flux of
methane to shallow sediments from fluid migration and the
Nigerian margin is an area of active fluid flux. Our studies
support these arguments since:
-
Most of the sites of known liquid oil macroseepage to
the surface are associated with BSRs thus these sites
must have vertical fluid migration occurring or having
occurred in the recent past;
-
All our gas hydrate-containing sites were over conduits
(i.e., faults, mud mounds, and depressions) for the upward
migration of fluids and hydrocarbons; and
-
Gas hydrates as well as macroseepage of oil and gas are
common on the Nigerian margin.
There is the general assumption (21) that
the deeper BSRs in the complex structural zones are fed by
upward migrating thermal gas from the active petroleum systems
that exists on the Nigerian continental margin. While to some
extent intuitively this must be true considering the extent
and amount of thermogenic liquid hydrocarbons in seafloor
sediments over faults as well as the presence of active petroleum
systems, the actual collections indicate that most of the
gas forming the shallow hydrates are predominately biogenic
methane. Our analyses indicate that while some thermogenic
gas components are sometimes present, the thermal gas is a
minor component. A few of the hydrate sites actually have
significant levels of thermogenic liquid hydrocarbon microseepage
but even these sites are still predominately methane (>99%)
with light isotopes (d 13C –50’s to –70’s 0/00).
Cunningham et al. (21) reports that one of the gas hydrated
sites had a d 13C of –54 0/00
indicating a considerable thermogenic component even though
it was >99% methane. Our conclusion is that while there
are thermogenic gas components in some of the hydrates as
evidence by the presence of small amounts of C2+
gases and carbon isotopes of methane in the –50’s to –70’s
o/oo range, the hydrate gas is predominately
being supplied by biogenic process presumably in the shallow
(upper few hundred meters) subsurface.
Regional
Heat Flow and Geothermal Gradient on the Nigerian Margin
Regional heat flow measurements were conducted
on the continental margin offshore Nigeria in June 1998 (Fig.
14) for the primary purpose of determining basal heat
flow for thermal maturation studies of the petroleum systems.
Heat flow measurements were acquired at 112 sites in water
depths between 500 and 3,400 meters using the Dalhousie Heat
Flow probe from Dalhousie University, which measures the geothermal
gradient at 8 depths in the first 5 meters of sediment and
the in situ thermal conductivity at the corresponding intervals.
Details of the instrument and measurements can be found in
Hutchison and Owen (23). Sites were chosen away from conduits
for fluid migration (i.e., faults) and in quiescent zones
to best reflect the regional heat flow of the area. Heat flow
in the study area ranged from 18.8 to 123.7 mW/m2,
with an average of 58.2 mW/m2. Fig.
14 is a bar chart of the distribution of heat flows for
the 112 sites. The chart shows a great predominance of heat
flows between 40 and 70 mW/m2. Fig.
16 shows the bottom water temperature at each site as
a function of water depth as well as the dissolution boundary
for methane hydrates from literature values (24, 25) as a
function of water depth. This figure illustrates that the
sediment surface at every site except the most shallow one
(500 m) is at a temperature and pressure regime within the
stability zone for methane hydrates. The thickness and the
bottom of the hydrate stability zone for each of these sites
thus depends on the temperature/pressure regime within the
sediment.
The bottom of the stability zone can be predicted
(to a first order) if the composition of the hydrate, bottom
water temperature, water depth, and geothermal gradient are
known. Fig. 17 shows the geothermal
gradient (in milliKelvins per meter) vs. the water depth measured
at each of the 112 heat flow sites. The figure illustrates
that there is no distinct trend of geothermal gradient with
increasing water depth at the stations measured. Because of
this, an average thermal gradient cannot be assumed for predictions
of the bottom of the hydrate stability zone in the region.
However, we have measured the bottom water temperature, the
geothermal gradient, and the water depth at each heat flow
site, as well as the composition of gas in hydrates recovered
at a few sites. Based on these measurements, the predicted
bottom of the methane hydrate stability zone can be calculated
for each site.
Fig. 18 shows the
calculated bottom of the methane hydrate stability zone vs.
water depth for each site. The figure also shows the calculated
zone-bottom if the average geothermal gradient measured for
the region is used. The plotted values generally follow the
trend shown by the average gradient, but deviations from this
trend line illustrate the effect of higher or lower than average
heat flows at the various sites.
Fig. 19 plots the
same data as Fig. 18, but it also
contains the depth values measured on the seismic records
that were interpreted as BSRs. The BSR depth values generally
fall at somewhat deeper depths than would be predicted from
the calculations of the bottom of the methane hydrate stability
zone. At water depths >1,200 meters, the linear best fit
BSR line is at increasing deeper depths than the similar line
from the calculated base of the methane hydrate stability
zone. The difference could be easily explained by the variability
in heat flow for the region (i.e., the predicted based of
the methane hydrate stability zone easily overlaps the observed
BSR depth considering the range of measured heat flow on the
slope). Other explanations for the difference include (1)
the inclusion of non-methane gases that shift the hydrate
stability to deeper depths; and (2) the estimate of 1,800
m/sec for the sound speed of all sediments is high. One could
argue that the BSR is deeper than predicted for a base of
the methane hydrate stability zone because of the inclusion
of other more thermal hydrocarbons (C2-C5).
While there is a general coincidence of the calculated gas
hydrate stability zone from the thermal data and the observed
depth of the BSR, we suggest it may be unreliable for the
reasons noted above to use the depth of the BSR as a means
of predicting regional heat flow for the region.
Acknowledgements
The 2-D seismic data from offshore Nigeria
was provided by Mabon Ltd. We wish to thank Dr. Keith Louden
of Dalhousie University for supervision of the heat flow collections
and the analysis of the heat flow data. Dave Hazen and Walter
Judge from Dalhousie University comprised the heat flow field
party. We thank Neil Summers and others of TDI-Brooks’ field
staff that participated in the collection of the hydrated
cores offshore Nigeria. We thank Bob Cunningham at Exxon for
providing us an expanded figure of his BSR map from offshore
Nigeria. Dr. Yuri Makogon provided useful instruction for
our models of the hydrate stability zone using the thermal
gradient data obtained from the heat flow measurements. Drs.
Gregory Salata and Luis Cifuentes at TAMU provided the carbon
isotope analyses. We especially want to thank our oil company
consortium that funded the collection of these Nigerian cores.
References
1. Kvenvolden, K.A., G.D. Ginsburg & V.A. Soloviev.
1993. Worldwide distribution of subaquatic gas hydrates. Geo-Marine
Letters 13(1): 32-40.
2. Sloan, E.D., Jr. 1990. Clathrate Hydrates of Natural
Gas. Marcel Dekker Inc. New York, N.Y.
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List of Tables
Table 1. Gas hydrate recovery rates
in offshore continental slope regions (>500 meters water
depth) collected from SGE piston coring programs.
Table 2. Carbon Isotope Ratios (o/oo)
of Hydrate Gases from the Gulf of Mexico Collected in Parr
Bomb.
Table 3. Locations of Gas Hydrates
offshore Nigeria.
Table 4. Headspace Gas Concentrations
in Gas Hydrated Cores on the Nigerian Continental Slope.
Table 5. Carbon Isotope Ratios of
Selected Headspace Gases Offshore Nigeria (1998 Program).
List of Figures
Figure 1. The modern
anatomy of the Niger delta showing locations of piston cores
collected.
Figure 2. Locations
of gas hydrates on the Nigerian continental margin. BSRs mapped
by Cunningham et al. (21) are also noted.
Figure 3. Chirp subbottom
records across a gas-hydrated site (Site NGC226).
Figure 4. Distribution
of total alkane gas (C1-C5) concentrations
in 1996 and 1998 cores (~230) from the Nigeria Delta.
Figure 5. Distribution
of C2+ alkane gas (C2-C5)
concentrations in 1996 and 1998 cores (~230) from the Nigeria
Delta.
Figure 6. Distribution
of alkane gas vs. total alkane gas concentrations in 1996
and 1998 cores (~230) from the Nigeria Delta.
Figure 7. Distribution
of high alkane gas (>100 ppmV) containing cores relative
to the location of the BSR’s mapped by Cunningham et al. (21).
Figure 8. Distribution
of cores with hydrogen sulfide in the bottom of the core relative
to the location of the BSR’s mapped by Cunningham et al. (21).
Figure 9. Example
of a BSR associated with a Nigerian core site that contains
visual oil-staining in the core.
Figure 10. Example
of the relationship between an extensive BSR to a large thrust
fault.
Figure 11. Illustration
of an extensive BSR in water depths of 1350 meters at approximately
270 meters below the seafloor.
Figure 12. A well-defined
BSR in water depths of 1800 meters and 175 milliseconds twtt
below the seafloor.
Figure 13. Cross-plot
of water depth versus BSR depth below the seafloor.
Figure 14. Locations
of heat flow sites collected on the Nigerian continental margin.
Figure 15. Histogram
of heat flows measurements for 122 sites.
Figure 16. Plot
of bottom water temperature (measured by the heat flow probe)
and the methane hydrate dissolution temperature boundary vs.
water depth.
Figure 17. Cross-plot
of the measured geothermal gradient vs. water depth for all
heat flow sites.
Figure 18. Plot
of the calculated bottom of methane hydrate stability zone
vs. water depth for all heat flow sites. The average depth
of methane hydrate stability is show as a solid line using
the average geothermal gradient (58.2 mW/m2).
Figure 19. Comparison
of the calculated bottom of methane hydrate stability zone
(Fig. 18) to actual measured depth of the BSR from an examination
of the seismic records. The linear best fit for the BSR is
shown (y = 5.6593x + 0.2647); R2 = 0.7632).
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