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June 2001
TDI-Brooks
Provides TAMU/GERG (Dr. Ian MacDonald) Self-Contained Thermistors
for
Year-Long Deployment at "Bush Hill" and Green Canyon-234
TDI-Brooks is providing Dr. Ian MacDonald at TAMU/GERG
in late June ten (10) miniaturized self-contained temperature
loggers for measuring time-temperature series at hydrate
sites. These loggers will be inserted into the sediment
using the submersible Johnson SEA-LINK's robotic arm.
These instruments are a new development of H. Villinger
and Anteres Datensysteme GmbH, Stuhr, Germany. Each
temperature logger is 185-mm long by 15-mm in diameter,
weighing 120 g. Each has a titanium body to withstand
the pressure to 6,000 meters water depth. The loggers
each contain a 3 VDC Type DL1/3N battery and can log 65,000
temperature/time data points per deployment. The battery
can operate for 500 days maximum. The logger's measuring
range is -20oC to +50oC with a resolution of 0.001oC.
Its accuracy after calibration is better than ±0.1oC.
The time interval between measurements can be pre-programmed
to be 1 second up to 4096 minutes (2.8 days). The
data logging start time can be pre-programmed to be from
immediate up to 30 days delay. Upon retrieval, data
from the logger are uploaded to a laptop computer for processing.
This design has undergone extensive field testing over the
last year, and has proven extremely reliable.
The northern Gulf of Mexico is the site of many hydrate
mounds that exist in water depths generally greater than
500 meters. Brooks and co-workers made the initial
discoveries of both thermogenic and biogenic gas hydrates
in these mounds and nearby deep ocean sediments in the mid-1980's.
Since that time the chemistry, biology and geology of these
sites have been studied by the PIs and others. However,
few heat flow measurements have been made around these mounds
and none with the sophisticated state-of-the-art Heat Flow
Probes that we can deploy.
The H. Villinger and Anteres Datensysteme GmbH thermistors
will be deployed by Dr. Ian MacDonald with the submersible
in July 2001 at the "Bush Hill" and GC-234 hydrate sites.
The thermistors can be deployed in pairs to provide synoptic
comparison of sediment/hydrate temperature with near-bottom
water temperature. At two sites, GC-185 (Bush Hill)
and GC-234, shallow deposits of gas hydrate are abundant
at water depths of about 550 meters. At the most active
vents, gas hydrate is exposed to the seawater and interacts
with changing water temperatures [MacDonald et al., 1994].
Elsewhere, hydrate layers are buried beneath 10-20 cm of
sediment. A recently developed hydrate drill will
permit researchers to bore short, narrow holes (~25 x 3-cm)
into the exposed hydrate from the submersible. For
this program, we propose to place a pair of thermistors
so that one probe is inserted into one of these holes and
the other probe remains exposed to bottom water. A
similar arrangement of probes will be deployed in the sediment-covered
gas hydrate deposits. A control pair would be deployed
in non-seep sediments off-axis at the "Bush Hill" site.
The thermistors would be deployed, then recovered during
the summer 2002 with the Johnson SEA-LINK submersible.
After deployment for one year, the five pairs of thermistors
in the sediment and water column overlying the sediment will
be recovered with the submersible. The temperature data
will be useful in modeling the effect of sea bottom water
and near-surface sediment fluctuations on gas hydrate stability
at these two sites where hydrates exist as outcrops and as
shallow hydrate burials. The magnitude of the temperature
fluctuations from primarily loop-current intrusions will be
able to be monitored over this long time series deployment
as well as the extent of propagation into the associated sediments.
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