--> Abstract: Challenges in Imaging the Deep Seabed: Examples from Gulf of Mexico Cold Seeps, by Carol Lutken, Marco D'Emidio, Michela Ingrassia, Leonardo Macelloni, and Martina Pierdomenico; #90167 (2013)
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Challenges in Imaging the Deep Seabed: Examples from Gulf of Mexico Cold Seeps

Carol Lutken, Marco D'Emidio, Michela Ingrassia, Leonardo Macelloni, and Martina Pierdomenico
[email protected]

Applying improved processing techniques to increasingly high Previous HitresolutionNext Hit data can produce extremely high Previous HitresolutionNext Hit results that reveal features invisible on standard Previous HitresolutionNext Hit images. Increasing demand for resources from the deep sea demands imaging the seabed in ever-more remote areas with increased accuracy. For economic, safety, and legal reasons, lessors of offshore real estate survey the seafloor and shallow sub-seafloor prior to conducting seafloor operations. A standard geohazard survey includes multibeam bathymetry, side-scan sonar and chirp subbottom profiling and will yield useful data at 5-25m Previous HitresolutionNext Hit. However, higher Previous HitresolutionNext Hit surveys are now possible and, though more time-consuming (and costly), yield potentially critical information not visible in coarser Previous HitresolutionNext Hit surveys: morphologic features, structure, biota, etc. Recovering such information has become increasingly important for reasons that include 1) Identification of natural seafloor features (i.e. fault traces, protected seafloor communities, seeps, mud volcanos), 2) Selection/elimination of target locations, 3) Identification of unnatural features (shipwrecks, instruments, pipelines), 4) Siting structures on the seafloor, 5) Instrument location/recovery. Using coarser Previous HitresolutionNext Hit surveying for regional studies, then focusing higher Previous HitresolutionNext Hit surveys on areas of particular interest, and applying meticulous processing of acoustic data, our team has produced 1m Previous HitresolutionTop seafloor images that have enabled us to identify a host of small-scale features not routinely imaged at coarser resolutions. Here we present significant results including small-scale morphologic features associated with seeps, instrument locations, and benthic fauna habitat in the Gulf of Mexico.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90167©2013 GCAGS and GCSSEPM 63rd Annual Convention, New Orleans, Louisiana, October 6-8, 2013