Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4539312 Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 2016 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Describe gas-related anomalies in echograms from Brazil, Argentina and South Africa.•Discuss gas structure variability amongst diverse settings.•Type of gas features depend on palaeo-environmental scenario and sediment grade.•Gas is associated with the postglacial transgression and infilling of low topography.

Acoustic anomalies in seismic records have revealed that gas-charged sediments are very common features in the coastal environments around the world. The ubiquitous gassy sediments challenge the effective acoustic mapping of shallow stratigraphy by seismic means, as well as having an important influence on environmental issues related to the coastal zone occupation and management. This paper documents examples of gassy sediments from coastal lagoons, estuaries, rivers, bays and the inner shelf and nearshore environments of Brazil, Argentina and South Africa. Seismic echograms from selected areas show several gas-related anomalies, which present distinctive morphologies for sediment-trapped gas, leaking or free gas discharge into the water column. In several places the gas-charged sediments occur in areas of palaeo-topographic lows related to fluvial channels and valleys that developed in the coastal zone due to sea level oscillations during the Quaternary period. This forcing by palaeo-topographic features results in the occurrence of shallow gas being controlled in most coastal sites by the previous environmental scenario, the stratigraphic arrangement of the transgressive infilling elements, and the local hydrodynamic conditions.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology
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