Modelling the benthic methane sink in Santa Barbara basin

The dissociation of gas hydrates has widely suggested to be a global climate forcing since millions of years ago. The “clathrate gun hypothesis” described by Kennett et al. (2003) in Santa Barbara Basin (SBB) suggests that past increases in ocean water temperatures near the seafloor may have induced...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Garcia Paba, Ruben
Other Authors: Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament d'Enginyeria Civil i Ambiental, Vaunat, Jean, Arndt, Sandra, Fuente Ruiz, Maria de la
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2117/377403
Description
Summary:The dissociation of gas hydrates has widely suggested to be a global climate forcing since millions of years ago. The “clathrate gun hypothesis” described by Kennett et al. (2003) in Santa Barbara Basin (SBB) suggests that past increases in ocean water temperatures near the seafloor may have induced to large-scale hydrate dissociation from marine reservoir. This methane release in enough proportion may contributing to the atmospheric warming that drove abrupt millennial-scale climate change. Recent researches and geological records suggest that climate change and ocean warm- ing could destabilise marine methane hydrate releasing large amounts methane from the seafloor to the ocean-atmosphere, further amplifying anthropologically driven global warm- ing and accelerating the destabilisation of remaining hydrates. SBB is characterized as the most prolific area of seepages of methane in the world, sed- iment records in the zone have documented brief, negative light carbon isotopic excursions in the late Quaternary in planktonic and benthic foraminifera interpreted as evidence of major releases of methane from the marine hydrate reservoir. All this multiple indicators warn of the possible presence of hydrates makes SBB an ideal place to study the possibility of future methane emissions due to the dissociation of hydrates. Even marine methane hydrate destabilise, migrating methane can be consumed by a number of biogeochemical processes occurring within the sediment column, specially Anaerobic Oxidation of Methane, which are expected to mitigate methane emissions to the water column. This work will consist of modelling methane efflux in SBB due to warming-induced hydrate destabilization, using an adaptive reaction-transport model, the Biogeochemical Reaction Network Simulator (BRNS). I intend to solve several some specific scientific questions as, how efficient is the AOM bio-filter when expose to different transient methane inputs from below and by using different formulations to express the rate of methane oxidation, ...