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uGeneral
statement
uFigure
captions
uStructural
setting
uNature
of mud /clasts
uGas
composition
uThermal
measurements
uDiscussion
uReferences
uGeneral
statement
uFigure
captions
uStructural
setting
uNature
of mud /clasts
uGas
composition
uThermal
measurements
uDiscussion
uReferences
uGeneral
statement
uFigure
captions
uStructural
setting
uNature
of mud /clasts
uGas
composition
uThermal
measurements
uDiscussion
uReferences
uGeneral
statement
uFigure
captions
uStructural
setting
uNature
of mud /clasts
uGas
composition
uThermal
measurements
uDiscussion
uReferences
uGeneral
statement
uFigure
captions
uStructural
setting
uNature
of mud /clasts
uGas
composition
uThermal
measurements
uDiscussion
uReferences
uGeneral
statement
uFigure
captions
uStructural
setting
uNature
of mud /clasts
uGas
composition
uThermal
measurements
uDiscussion
uReferences
uGeneral
statement
uFigure
captions
uStructural
setting
uNature
of mud /clasts
uGas
composition
uThermal
measurements
uDiscussion
uReferences
uGeneral
statement
uFigure
captions
uStructural
setting
uNature
of mud /clasts
uGas
composition
uThermal
measurements
uDiscussion
uReferences
uGeneral
statement
uFigure
captions
uStructural
setting
uNature
of mud /clasts
uGas
composition
uThermal
measurements
uDiscussion
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Figure Captions
Return to top.
Mud domes and
volcanoes developed in different structural settings (Biju-Duval et al.,
1982; Valery et al., 1985; Brown and Westbrook, 1987; Brown, 1990;
Rutledge and Leonard 2001; Deville et al., 2003a, b [in press],
Figure 1). The front of the tectonic wedge
is characterized by an imbricated thrust system mostly devoid of active
mud volcanism activity. The main province of active shale diapirs and
mud volcanoes is found within the core of the tectonic prism along ramp
anticlines and on top of sigmoid rises of mud diapirs (Figure
2), or else along major transfer zones (especially at the eastern
extremity of the El Pilar fault in the Barbados prism; Valery et al.,
1985; Griboulard et al., 1991). In the slope between Trinidad and the
Barbados prism mud volcanoes have a rather random distribution (Figure
3). The western part of the Barbados prism is characterized by the
occurrence of extension structures overimposed on thrust tectonics
(Deville, 2000;Figure 1), and the very inner part of the prism is devoid
of active mud volcanism. Nevertheless, in the inner part of the Barbados
prism, fossil mud volcanic activity associated with hydrocarbon
migration is known notably on Barbados island (Speed et al., 1991).
Laterally, toward the SW, the belt of mud volcanoes is becoming narrower
and emerges in Trinidad within the transpressive fold-and-thrust belt of
the southern part of the island (Central and Southern Ranges).
Combined X-ray
diffraction and SEM studies (in the Trinidad and on cores collected from
mud volcanoes of the Barbados prism) have shown that the solid particles
within the mud are composed of clays (kaolinite, illite, smectite,
vermiculite), chlorite, and muscovite, but also abundant grains of
quartz, feldspar (albite, K-feldspar), carbonates (calcite, dolomite,
siderite), titane oxides (rutile, anatase), apatite, barite, and pyrite.
The grain size varies from less than 0.2 µm to more than 200 µm, and the
grains are supported within a very thin matrix constituted by a mixing
of various clays, micas sheets, and also small fragments (less than 5
µm) of quartz and albite with clearly angular shapes and internal
microfractures, especially in quartz. The mechanical damage probably
results from shearing during compaction or mud volcanism eruptive
processes. Such quartz grains can make up more than 90% of the solid
fraction within the mud . In the Trinidad mud volcanoes with a recent
eruptive activity (Piparo, Devil’s Woodyard, Columbus group, Anglais
Point, Moruga), exotic clasts are found (mainly centimetric to
pluri-decimetric). The nature of the clasts is polygenic (carbonates,
sandstones, shales, calcite, sulphur nodules, etc.). Some clasts are
ancient pebbles initially interbedded within Tertiary formations and
mobilized during eruptions, but most of the clasts show angular shapes
resulting from intense fracturing. Fractures are filled with carbonate
cements (Ca and Ca-Mg). Frequently, real breccias made up of angular and
initially joined elements are included within calcite crystallizations.
We interpret most of the angular clasts and the breccia as the result of
hydraulic fracturing processes. Using nannofossils, it is possible to
date precisely the clasts expelled by the mud volcanoes. According to
the ages obtained, these elements belong to Tertiary formations, ranging
from Paleocene to Miocene. Cretaceous clasts are expelled by the Piparo
mud volcano in the Central Range, the older elements being of early
Barremian age. But in this case, these clasts can come from the base of
the Naparima thrust sheet and they do not necessarily have a deep
origin. On the other hand, the mud shows systematically a mixing of
species ranging from Cretaceous to Late Miocene. This suggests that the
mud consists of a mixture of microscopic elements of various origins
(from Tertiary formations, but also from Cretaceous levels). These data
show that the zone of initiation of the mud volcanism is necessarily at
least as deep as the Paleogene and probably the Cretaceous, because the
mud intrusions do not crosscut thrust sheets involving Cretaceous-Paleogene
formations, except for Piparo. In the offshore, the study of
nannofossils in cores collected from the south of the Barbados prism
suggests that the mobilized sediments in shale domes and mud volcanoes,
are of Miocene-Pliocene age (zones NN15 to NN21) at the front of the mud
volcanism zone. However, various horizons probably including the Eocene,
and certainly including Oligocene (zones NP25 to NP21), Miocene, and
Pliocene intervals have been mobilized in the inner part of the Barbados
Ridge.
Return to top.
In the onshore mud
volcanoes of Trinidad, the gas is mainly methane associated with
moderate concentrations of ethane, propane, and carbon dioxide. This dry
gas is characterized by a dC13
of methane which ranges between -52 and 33o/oo (Figure
4). Such d13C1
values associated with very dry gases are generally interpreted as
intermediate values between a purely bacterial gas and a purely
thermogenic gas. Nevertheless methane
d13C can be affected by post-genetic phenomena
(segregation during migration, chemical bacterial alteration) and it is
possible to use the d13C(C1)
vs C1/C2
diagram (Figure 4) to distinguish some of
these processes (Prinzhofer and Pernaton, 1997). This suggests that a
mixing hypothesis between bacterial and thermogenic gas must be rejected
because in these cases the bacterial end member would have methane
d13C between -52 and
-33 o/oo, which are too heavy values, incompatible with a bacterial
origin. Therefore, we consider that most of the analyzed gas samples
have a strictly thermogenic origin. The dryness of the gas would be due
to a segregation process, which probably occurred during its migration
from depth to the surface (adsorption on the solid grains of the mud ,
and solubility processes). The concentration in C2+
is higher in the sites where eruptions occurred recently (Piparo and
Devil’s Woodyard, Columbus). We suppose that adsorption occurs mainly
during steady state phases and that C2+
is released only during and after catastrophic eruptions. Though the
maturity of the gas is difficult to define precisely because of the
segregation processes mentioned above, this thermogenic gas has probably
been generated in the oil window. In the case of very recent (Neogene)
gas generation, as observed in Trinidad, high flows of thermogenic gas
could have been generated at temperature around 150oC,
similar to the equilibrium temperature of the deep reservoir that has
fed the mud volcanoes (Dia et al., 1999). The chemical and isotopic
composition of the gas suggests a cogenetic origin with the hydrocarbon
fields of Trinidad, which both exhibit notably atypical heavy values of
d13C (CO2).
Some values are approaching 30o/oo, which is very unusual in potential
sources of CO2 in sedimentary
basins. It is now well established that the source rock of the
hydrocarbon fields of southern Trinidad is of Cretaceous age (Gautier
and Naparima Hill formations; Rodrigues, 1988; Talukdar et al., 1990;
Heppard et al., 1998). The gas from the mud volcanoes being cogenetic
with the gas of the HC fields, we also attribute a Cretaceous source
rock for its origin. From another point of view, the analysis of noble
gas radiogenic isotopes has shown that the gas expelled from the mud
volcanoes exhibits lower 40Ar/20Ne, and 4He/20Ne
ratios with respect to the gas within the deep HC reservoirs, implying
that the gas from the mud volcanoes has a shorter residence time than
the gas associated with the oil fields (Battani et al., 2001). So, the
gas of the mud volcanoes cannot be issued from a direct leakage from the
HC fields, but would come directly from deeper kitchens.
New heat flow
measurements made during the CARAMBA survey, on some active mud
volcanoes in the southern area of the Barbados prism, show positive
anomalies (values higher than 100mW/m2, up to 230 mW/m2
at the vicinity of mud volcanoes in a heat flow background regime lower
than 40 mW/m2). Moreover, at the vicinity of some mud
volcanoes, BSRs are shallower compared to the areas around suggesting
that the stability field of gas-hydrates is here more restricted to
upper levels compared to the surrounding areas. We interpret those
anomalies as related to heat diffusion associated to the circulation of
hot fluids into the conduits of the mud volcanoes. We also studied the
temperature distribution within the mud conduits of some mud volcanoes
onshore Trinidad. We noticed an influence of the geometry of the
conduits on the fluid circulation and thus on the temperature
distribution. Complex temperature distribution implying convection
processes were measured in large conduits, whereas linear gradient
implying processes close to simple advection were observed in linear mud
chimneys. It is worth noting that in both cases one can obtain reverse
gradients that can be related either to the geometry of the convective
cells or to changes during time of the temperature of the fluid flows at
the base of the investigated conduits.
Return to top.
Mud volcanoes
correspond to sedimentary eruption of liquefied material forming cones
or mud pies and associated superficial mud flows, whereas shale dome
correspond to piercing diapirs of mobilized plastic shales, which have
probably never been liquefied. Mud volcanism and shale dome processes
are both obviously related to the development of overpressure at depth
which contributes to sediment mobilization by reducing the strength
within the overpressured layer and which is necessary for mud extrusion
(to counterbalance the mud load). Overpressure generation is favored, in
this tectonic context, by the conjunction of fast sedimentation rates
leading to compaction disequilibrium (sedimentary loading), and
compressive stress regimes inducing layer-parallel shortening and
tectonic overloading. Also gas-hydrate occurrence in these deep offshore
areas is likely to reduce permeability in the superficial levels and so
to slow down fluid expulsion, favoring overpressuring. Moreover, the
high deformation rates in accretionary prisms (especially compared to
onshore mountain belts) probably have an important role in the dynamic
development of overpressure (typically non-static phenomena). Moreover,
temperature induces the cracking of hydrocarbons in thick prisms, which
is an additional factor for overpressure generation. Although the gas
expelled by the mud volcanoes in deep water is most likely to be
dissolved, the occurrence of free gas bubbles, especially in the
shallowest areas, is also likely to reduce the density of the
sediments.
Hydraulic fracturing
resulting from excess pore pressure tends to be sub-horizontal (Figure
5). Consequently, lateral hydraulic connectivity may be enhanced.
High pore pressures in the center of piggyback basins, if approaching
the lithostatic load, may be transmitted laterally towards the anticline
crest where sedimentary thickness are smaller. Consequently, if pore
pressure overcome the vertical load, upward mud extrusion can occur. Low
pore fluid pressure near the surface will favor the lateral emplacement
as sedimentary sills or chambers from the main vertical mud conduits
toward the surrounding formations. This process is well imaged on some
seismic sections (Biju-Duval et al. 1985), and has been proven by
drilling in Trinidad (Higgins and Saunders, 1974). Mud volcanoes, can
significantly modify the flow path of water and hydrocarbons migration
within the basin. Both are efficient vertical conduits allowing direct
escapes to the surface, as evidenced by methane-rich cold seeps
associated to the development of numerous chemiosynthetic communities (Jollivet
et al., 1990).
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seismic investigations on the Barbados ridge complex (Eastern
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Brown, K.M., 1990, The nature and hydrologic signifiance
of mud diapirs and diatremes for accretionary systems. Journal of
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Brown, K.M., and Westbrook, G.K., 1987, The tectonic
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