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Gas
hydrate and
permafrost
controls on gas migration: Examples from the Mackenzie
Delta and the North Slope of Alaska
By
S.R. Dallimore1, T.S. Collett2, G. Lynch3, and J.F. Wright4
1Geological Survey of Canada, P.O Box 6000, Sidney, B.C. V8L 4B2
2U.S. Geological Survey, Box 25046, MS-939, Denver, CO 80225
3Shell Canada Limited, 400 - 4th Ave. SW,P.O. Box 100, Station M Calgary, Alberta T2P 2H5
4Geological Survey of Canada, 601 Booth St., Ottawa, Ontario, K1A 0E8
The
application of surface geochemical prospecting techniques is complex in Arctic
areas where large contrasts in vertical permeability may be induced by geologic
phenomena associated with variations in near surface ground temperatures. In the
Mackenzie Delta and northern Alaska, prolonged exposure to cold air temperatures
over past millennia has formed
permafrost
(ground perennially below 0°C)
beneath land areas. Ground temperatures may be as low as -9°C with
permafrost
thickness varying from 100 to750 meters. As a consequence of these cold ground
temperatures, a thick gas hydrate stability field is also typical of northern
Alaska and the Mackenzie Delta. For Structure I methane hydrate, thought to be
the most common gas hydrate in nature, the pressuretemperature stability field
may extend from a few hundred to over 1500 metres depth. A key consideration in
terms of gas migration through
permafrost
or gas hydrates occurrences is the
effect of ice or gas hydrate within the sediment matrix, creating a reduced
effective permeability and ultimately limiting vertical gas flux. Quantitative
analyses of the concentration and geochemistry of headspace gases collected from
scientific boreholes drilled over conventional gas fields in the Mackenzie Delta
confirm that ice-bonded
permafrost
can be a very effective barrier and almost
certainly limit the utility of surface prospecting techniques. Field and
laboratory data from the 3.7 TCF Mallik gas hydrate field, suggest that gas
hydrates behave in a similar manner. In contrast however, in some warm
permafrost
settings (i.e. temperatures between -2° and 0°C), the
physiochemical
effects
of the porous media (salinity, clay content, etc.) can
prevent the pore water from freezing and thus maintain more typical permeability
conditions. Similar
effects
can suppress gas hydrate formation even though the
temperature and pressure stability conditions may be within the accepted
stability envelope for pure methane-water systems. These areas are referred to
as taliks when they are below 0°C but without frozen pore water. Typically
water bodies greater than 2m depth, that do not freeze to the base in the
winter, create either a talik or elevate ground temperatures suppressing gas
hydrate formation. Given that lakes, ponds and rivers occupy 30 to 60% of the
land area in many parts of the Arctic coastal plain, a comprehensive
understanding of the near surface geothermal regime is paramount to interpreting
conventional geochemical exploration data.
A
geochemical exploration model is proposed for
permafrost
terrains of northern
Alaska and the Mackenzie Delta that accounts for three dimensional changes in
effective permeability caused by variations in the near surface
permafrost
and
gas hydrate distribution. Given the same boundary conditions, vertical gas flux
is expected to be greatly reduced in terrestrial areas where ground temperatures
create thick, uniform, ice bonded
permafrost
and gas hydrate. Higher flux may
occur beneath water bodies with sufficient thermal mass (dictated by the mean
annual bottom temperatures and area of the lake) to create thawed conditions, or
through combined physiochemical and porous media
effects
reduce or retard pore
ice or gas hydrate formation. Geothermal modeling studies suggests that these
high permeability chimneys should be similar to an hourglass in shape beneath
the water bodies and that they should be effective conduits for preferential gas
migration from deeper hydrocarbon sources. One possible exploration strategy is
to fingerprint the chemistry of stagnant water bodies and determine the
abundance and isotope signatures of dissolved hydrocarbon gases. Limnology
studies of lakes from Alaska and Canada suggest that the chemistry of the Arctic
lakes may shift during the winter period as the lake ice canopy retards
atmospheric flux, causing the concentrations of dissolved gas in the water
column to increase. This suggests that late winter sampling may be optimal.
Field work during winter of 2001 will be undertaken in the Mackenzie Delta to
assess this prospecting technique.