Possible links between methane seepages and glacial-interglacial transitions in the South China Sea

Here we present an example of continuous geochemical data of seep carbonates from a drill core from the South China Sea, which reveals three stages of methane seepage linked to the dissociation of biogenic methane hydrate: ~130.3 ka BP before, MIS 5 (~130.3 to 111.4 ka BP) and MIS 1 (~11.1 to 10.0 k...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Deng, Yinan
Other Authors: Yinan Deng
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Mendeley 2020
Subjects:
geo
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.17632/XXHCPFSWF5.1
https://doi.org/10.17632/XXHCPFSWF5
Description
Summary:Here we present an example of continuous geochemical data of seep carbonates from a drill core from the South China Sea, which reveals three stages of methane seepage linked to the dissociation of biogenic methane hydrate: ~130.3 ka BP before, MIS 5 (~130.3 to 111.4 ka BP) and MIS 1 (~11.1 to 10.0 ka BP). Our results evidence that methane seepage was induced by warm seawater during deglaciations. We suspect this process to occur in other world regions and infer that cold seep activities might occur more widespread at glacial-interglacial transitions, which in turn might have accelerated global warming.