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Methane Hydrate and Free Gas on the Blake Ridge from Vertical Seismic Profiling
533
Citations
25
References
1996
Year
EngineeringVertical Seismic ProfilingNatural Gas HydrateEarth ScienceGeophysicsMarine GeologyEarthquake EngineeringBlake RidgeSeismic ImagingClear BsrGeologyGas HydrateSedimentologyTectonicsSeismologyCivil EngineeringNatural Gas Hydrate SystemMethane HydrateGeochemistry
Seismic velocities measured in three drill holes through a gas hydrate deposit on the Blake Ridge, offshore South Carolina, indicate that substantial free gas exists to at least 250 meters beneath the bottom-simulating reflection (BSR). Both methane hydrate and free gas exist even where a clear BSR is absent. The low reflectance, or blanking, above the BSR is caused by lithologic homogeneity of the sediments rather than by hydrate cementation. The average methane hydrate saturation above the BSR is relatively low (5 to 7 percent of porosity), which suggests that earlier global estimates of methane in hydrates may be too high by as much as a factor of 3.
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