The Thawing Arctic: Mapping U.S. Beaufort Sea Offshore Permafrost / Gas Hydrates (?)

Gas hydrates are crystalline compounds that store significantly more methane than free gas with the same volume. Only stable within low-temperature and moderate-pressure conditions, gas hydrates occur in deep marine (>300 - 500 m water depth) settings and areas of thick permafrost, such as the Ar...

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Main Author: Brothers, Laura
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository 2012
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:https://scholars.unh.edu/ccom_seminars/78
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spelling ftuninhampshire:oai:scholars.unh.edu:ccom_seminars-1077 2024-09-15T17:58:49+00:00 The Thawing Arctic: Mapping U.S. Beaufort Sea Offshore Permafrost / Gas Hydrates (?) Brothers, Laura 2012-04-13T07:00:00Z image/png https://scholars.unh.edu/ccom_seminars/78 https://scholars.unh.edu/context/ccom_seminars/article/1077/type/native/viewcontent/79.png_AWSAccessKeyId_AKIAYVUS7KB2IXSYB4XB_Signature__2Fyq7SI4Qb1EExvwVyrwklmcDIf0_3D_Expires_1725029613 unknown University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository https://scholars.unh.edu/ccom_seminars/78 https://scholars.unh.edu/context/ccom_seminars/article/1077/type/native/viewcontent/79.png_AWSAccessKeyId_AKIAYVUS7KB2IXSYB4XB_Signature__2Fyq7SI4Qb1EExvwVyrwklmcDIf0_3D_Expires_1725029613 Seminars text 2012 ftuninhampshire 2024-08-02T04:50:30Z Gas hydrates are crystalline compounds that store significantly more methane than free gas with the same volume. Only stable within low-temperature and moderate-pressure conditions, gas hydrates occur in deep marine (>300 - 500 m water depth) settings and areas of thick permafrost, such as the Arctic. In nature, gas hydrates exist close to their pressure-temperature equilibrium, making them susceptible to warming-driven dissociation. Throughout the Holocene circum-Arctic shelves have experienced rapid sea-level rise and temperature increases with some offshore locations warming by as much as 16 °K. These shelves now host degrading submerged permafrost and possibly substantial deposits of dissociating gas hydrates. Nearshore gas hydrate can only exist within and subjacent to permafrost, and thus, areas at the permafrost-to-no permafrost transition zone are those most likely degassing. On the U.S. Beaufort margin, subsea permafrost extent has never been systematically mapped, and the best insights about permafrost and associated gas hydrate have been based on a limited number of offshore boreholes and numerical studies, with sometimes contrasting predictions of the permafrost’s seaward extent. We use 5,000 km of multichannel seismic (MCS) data acquired by industry and the USGS between 1977 and 1992 to map a velocity anomaly diagnostic of ice bonded coarse-grained sediments along 700 km of the US Beaufort coastline. We integrate these data with recently collected (2010, 2011)swath bathymetry, high-resolution seismic data and methane flux data. High-velocity (>2.3 km/s) refractions, which are evident in prestack MCS shot records, reveal laterally continuous layers of shallow, ice-bonded, coarse-grained sediments beneath the inner continental shelf. The permafrost layer refractions (PLR) occur in less than 5% of the examined tracklines, and calculated PLR depths range from ~ 5 to 470 m below seafloor. The PLR end within 30 km of shore and do not extend beyond the 20 m isobath, implying that older assumptions ... Text Beaufort Sea Ice permafrost University of New Hampshire: Scholars Repository
institution Open Polar
collection University of New Hampshire: Scholars Repository
op_collection_id ftuninhampshire
language unknown
description Gas hydrates are crystalline compounds that store significantly more methane than free gas with the same volume. Only stable within low-temperature and moderate-pressure conditions, gas hydrates occur in deep marine (>300 - 500 m water depth) settings and areas of thick permafrost, such as the Arctic. In nature, gas hydrates exist close to their pressure-temperature equilibrium, making them susceptible to warming-driven dissociation. Throughout the Holocene circum-Arctic shelves have experienced rapid sea-level rise and temperature increases with some offshore locations warming by as much as 16 °K. These shelves now host degrading submerged permafrost and possibly substantial deposits of dissociating gas hydrates. Nearshore gas hydrate can only exist within and subjacent to permafrost, and thus, areas at the permafrost-to-no permafrost transition zone are those most likely degassing. On the U.S. Beaufort margin, subsea permafrost extent has never been systematically mapped, and the best insights about permafrost and associated gas hydrate have been based on a limited number of offshore boreholes and numerical studies, with sometimes contrasting predictions of the permafrost’s seaward extent. We use 5,000 km of multichannel seismic (MCS) data acquired by industry and the USGS between 1977 and 1992 to map a velocity anomaly diagnostic of ice bonded coarse-grained sediments along 700 km of the US Beaufort coastline. We integrate these data with recently collected (2010, 2011)swath bathymetry, high-resolution seismic data and methane flux data. High-velocity (>2.3 km/s) refractions, which are evident in prestack MCS shot records, reveal laterally continuous layers of shallow, ice-bonded, coarse-grained sediments beneath the inner continental shelf. The permafrost layer refractions (PLR) occur in less than 5% of the examined tracklines, and calculated PLR depths range from ~ 5 to 470 m below seafloor. The PLR end within 30 km of shore and do not extend beyond the 20 m isobath, implying that older assumptions ...
format Text
author Brothers, Laura
spellingShingle Brothers, Laura
The Thawing Arctic: Mapping U.S. Beaufort Sea Offshore Permafrost / Gas Hydrates (?)
author_facet Brothers, Laura
author_sort Brothers, Laura
title The Thawing Arctic: Mapping U.S. Beaufort Sea Offshore Permafrost / Gas Hydrates (?)
title_short The Thawing Arctic: Mapping U.S. Beaufort Sea Offshore Permafrost / Gas Hydrates (?)
title_full The Thawing Arctic: Mapping U.S. Beaufort Sea Offshore Permafrost / Gas Hydrates (?)
title_fullStr The Thawing Arctic: Mapping U.S. Beaufort Sea Offshore Permafrost / Gas Hydrates (?)
title_full_unstemmed The Thawing Arctic: Mapping U.S. Beaufort Sea Offshore Permafrost / Gas Hydrates (?)
title_sort thawing arctic: mapping u.s. beaufort sea offshore permafrost / gas hydrates (?)
publisher University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository
publishDate 2012
url https://scholars.unh.edu/ccom_seminars/78
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genre Beaufort Sea
Ice
permafrost
genre_facet Beaufort Sea
Ice
permafrost
op_source Seminars
op_relation https://scholars.unh.edu/ccom_seminars/78
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