Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5782037 | Marine and Petroleum Geology | 2017 | 55 Pages |
Abstract
We present several potential source-reservoir scenarios between the thick fractured mud units and thin hydrate bearing sands. We observe that hydrate preferentially forms within thin sand layers rather than fractures when sands are present in larger marine mud units. Based on regional mapping showing the patchy lateral extent of the thin sand layers, we propose that diffusive methane migration or short-migration of microbially generated methane from the marine mud units led to the formation of hydrate in these thin sands, as discontinuous sands would not be conducive to long-range migration of methane from deeper reservoirs.
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Authors
Jess I.T. Hillman, Ann E. Cook, Hugh Daigle, Michael Nole, Alberto Malinverno, Kevin Meazell, Peter B. Flemings,