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GCSeismic Attributes of Gas Hydrate Systems*
By
Diana Sava and Bob Hardage1
Search and Discovery Article #40255 (2007)
Posted August 31, 2007
*Adapted from the Geophysical Corner column, prepared by the authors, in AAPG Explorer, August, 2007, and entitled “Diving Into Gas Hydrate Systems.” Editor of Geophysical Corner is Bob A. Hardage. Managing Editor of AAPG Explorer is Vern Stefanic; Larry Nation is Communications Director.
1Bureau of Economic Geology, The University of Texas at Austin ([email protected])
General Statement
The need to understand deepwater gas hydrate systems is increasing, as several quarters of the geosciences world want answers about:
1) The use of hydrate as an energy resource.
2) The role of hydrate in seafloor stability.
3) Hydrate linkage to shallow-water flow.
4) The nature of hydrate system architecture.
Gas hydrate (Figure 1) is a solid material in which water molecules link together to form a cage, or clathrate, which encloses a single gas molecule. Several of these clathrates then link together to form a basic “unit volume” of crystalline hydrate. Depending on the type of gas molecules that are trapped in these cages, the number of clathrates that are linked to form these unit volumes may be 8 (Structure I), 24 (Structure II) or 6 (Structure H).
Because this ice-like material affects VP and VS seismic propagation velocities in deepwater sediment, it appears that accurate measurements of VP and VS made across deepwater, near-seafloor strata may allow hydrate concentrations within these strata to be estimated. However, a major problem that confronts geophysicists who attempt to use seismic attributes to infer hydrate concentration in deepwater systems is that no one knows with confidence how these small unit-
building
blocks of
hydrate are distributed within their host sediment.
uGeneral StatementuFigure Captions
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Four Hydrate-Sediment MorphologiesFour possible hydrate-sediment morphologies are illustrated in Figure 2:
1)
2)
3) In
4)
In some areas, hydrate no doubt exists in vertical fractures and dikes, but for brevity, vertically oriented hydrate distributions are not included in this suite of models.
Problems in Determining Concentration
The dilemma
confronting hydrate investigators is that for any given hydrate
concentration, seismic propagation velocity changes significantly for
each of these possible hydrate distributions (
For a fixed
concentration of hydrate (say a volumetric fraction of 30 percent), VP
can range from 3300 m/s (
Laboratory Analyses of CoresThis lack of understanding about hydrate-sediment morphologies in deepwater strata exists because there is such a paucity of laboratory analyses of cores that traverse deepwater hydrate systems. For seismic and well log analyses of deepwater hydrates to accelerate at a faster pace, deepwater cores:
1) Must be obtained. 2) Must be maintained in their in situ temperature and pressure environment. 3) Must be subjected to laboratory studies while maintaining these in situ conditions.
These laboratory tests must
be designed so that the spatial distribution of hydrate throughout each
test sample is accurately defined for specific hydrate systems. Only
then can researchers decide whether
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