Effect of thermal non-equilibrium, seafloor topography and fluid advection on BSR-derived geothermal gradient

The seafloor and bottom simulating reflectors (BSRs) are interpreted from the 3D seismic data acquired in Krishna–Godavari (KG) offshore basin in the vicinity of sites drilled/cored during National Gas Hydrate Program (NGHP) Expedition-01. The shallow structures such as inner toe-thrust fault system...

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Main Authors: Mandal, R., Dewangan, P., Ramprasad, T., Kumar, B.J.P., Vishwanath, K.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://drs.nio.org/drs/handle/2264/4674
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spelling ftnio:oai:dsr.nio.org:2264/4674 2023-05-15T17:12:10+02:00 Effect of thermal non-equilibrium, seafloor topography and fluid advection on BSR-derived geothermal gradient Mandal, R. Dewangan, P. Ramprasad, T. Kumar, B.J.P. Vishwanath, K. 2014 http://drs.nio.org/drs/handle/2264/4674 en eng Elsevier An edited version of this paper was published by Elsevier. Copyright [2014] Elsevier seafloor topography offshore basin gas hydrate sediment Journal Article 2014 ftnio 2015-01-16T23:25:29Z The seafloor and bottom simulating reflectors (BSRs) are interpreted from the 3D seismic data acquired in Krishna–Godavari (KG) offshore basin in the vicinity of sites drilled/cored during National Gas Hydrate Program (NGHP) Expedition-01. The shallow structures such as inner toe-thrust fault system, regional and local linear fault systems and mass transport deposits are inferred from attributes of seafloor time structure as well as from the seismic profiles. The geothermal gradient is estimated from the depths and temperatures of the seafloor and the BSR. The temperature at the BSR depth is estimated from the methane hydrate and seawater salinity phase boundary assuming that the BSR represents the base of the gas hydrate stability zone. The spatial variations in geothermal gradient (GTG) show a strong correlation with seafloor topography in the KG basin. The GTG decreases by ∼13–30% over the topographic mounds formed due to inner toe-thrust faults and recent mass transport deposits. The GTG decreases by only 5–10% over the mounds, likely due to defocusing of heat flux based on one-dimensional topographic modeling. Hence, the GTG perturbation due to topography alone cannot explain the observed GTG anomaly. The temperature profile beneath these mounds may not be in equilibrium with the surroundings either due to the recent upliftment of sediments along the inner toe-thrust faults or rapid deposition of sediments due to slumping/sliding. In contrast, an increase in GTG by 10–15% is observed in the vicinity of major fault systems. We presume that the likely mechanism for the increase in GTG is fluid advection from a deeper part of the basin. A detailed thermal modeling involving the effect of surface topography, high sedimentation rates, fluid advection and sediment thickening due to tectonics is required to understand the thermal profile in KG offshore basin. Article in Journal/Newspaper Methane hydrate National Institute of Oceanography, India: Digital Repository Service (DRS@nio)
institution Open Polar
collection National Institute of Oceanography, India: Digital Repository Service (DRS@nio)
op_collection_id ftnio
language English
topic seafloor topography
offshore basin
gas hydrate
sediment
spellingShingle seafloor topography
offshore basin
gas hydrate
sediment
Mandal, R.
Dewangan, P.
Ramprasad, T.
Kumar, B.J.P.
Vishwanath, K.
Effect of thermal non-equilibrium, seafloor topography and fluid advection on BSR-derived geothermal gradient
topic_facet seafloor topography
offshore basin
gas hydrate
sediment
description The seafloor and bottom simulating reflectors (BSRs) are interpreted from the 3D seismic data acquired in Krishna–Godavari (KG) offshore basin in the vicinity of sites drilled/cored during National Gas Hydrate Program (NGHP) Expedition-01. The shallow structures such as inner toe-thrust fault system, regional and local linear fault systems and mass transport deposits are inferred from attributes of seafloor time structure as well as from the seismic profiles. The geothermal gradient is estimated from the depths and temperatures of the seafloor and the BSR. The temperature at the BSR depth is estimated from the methane hydrate and seawater salinity phase boundary assuming that the BSR represents the base of the gas hydrate stability zone. The spatial variations in geothermal gradient (GTG) show a strong correlation with seafloor topography in the KG basin. The GTG decreases by ∼13–30% over the topographic mounds formed due to inner toe-thrust faults and recent mass transport deposits. The GTG decreases by only 5–10% over the mounds, likely due to defocusing of heat flux based on one-dimensional topographic modeling. Hence, the GTG perturbation due to topography alone cannot explain the observed GTG anomaly. The temperature profile beneath these mounds may not be in equilibrium with the surroundings either due to the recent upliftment of sediments along the inner toe-thrust faults or rapid deposition of sediments due to slumping/sliding. In contrast, an increase in GTG by 10–15% is observed in the vicinity of major fault systems. We presume that the likely mechanism for the increase in GTG is fluid advection from a deeper part of the basin. A detailed thermal modeling involving the effect of surface topography, high sedimentation rates, fluid advection and sediment thickening due to tectonics is required to understand the thermal profile in KG offshore basin.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Mandal, R.
Dewangan, P.
Ramprasad, T.
Kumar, B.J.P.
Vishwanath, K.
author_facet Mandal, R.
Dewangan, P.
Ramprasad, T.
Kumar, B.J.P.
Vishwanath, K.
author_sort Mandal, R.
title Effect of thermal non-equilibrium, seafloor topography and fluid advection on BSR-derived geothermal gradient
title_short Effect of thermal non-equilibrium, seafloor topography and fluid advection on BSR-derived geothermal gradient
title_full Effect of thermal non-equilibrium, seafloor topography and fluid advection on BSR-derived geothermal gradient
title_fullStr Effect of thermal non-equilibrium, seafloor topography and fluid advection on BSR-derived geothermal gradient
title_full_unstemmed Effect of thermal non-equilibrium, seafloor topography and fluid advection on BSR-derived geothermal gradient
title_sort effect of thermal non-equilibrium, seafloor topography and fluid advection on bsr-derived geothermal gradient
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2014
url http://drs.nio.org/drs/handle/2264/4674
genre Methane hydrate
genre_facet Methane hydrate
op_rights An edited version of this paper was published by Elsevier. Copyright [2014] Elsevier
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