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Increase in Methane Input to the Atmosphere from Hydrocarbon Seeps on the World’s Continental Shelves During Lowered Sea Level
By
Bruce Luyendyk, James Kennett, and Jordan Clark
Department of Geological Sciences, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106
Present
day seepage from hydrocarbon reservoirs beneath the world’s continental
margins discharge oil and natural gas into the ocean and atmosphere and
contribute to the global methane budget. On the northern shelf of the Santa
Barbara Channel, California the Coal Oil
Point
seep field discharges about
100,000 m3 of gas and 100 bbl of
oil per day. The hydrocarbons seep from faulted anticlines in the Monterey and
Sisquoc Formations. The gas includes 40 metric tons of methane emitted to the
atmosphere each day. We have determined that an equal amount of methane
dissolves in the water column as hydrocarbon gas bubbles travel 50 to 70 meters
to the ocean surface. The dissolved methane is advected away from the seeps by
currents and dissipates throughout the waters of the Southern California Bight.
Ultimately this dissolved methane is oxidized by microbes in the ocean or
escapes to the atmosphere. The relative amounts due to these processes are
unknown, but we assume that a significant proportion of the dissolved methane is
lost in the ocean to oxidation. During lowering sea level of glacial periods
these seeps and others like them around the world became exposed to the
atmosphere. Furthermore, deeper gas seeps on the upper continental slope became
covered with less water. The result of the sea level fall was more methane input
directly to the atmosphere instead of dissolving in the ocean and oxidizing.
The greenhouse effect of the added methane input to the atmosphere serves as a negative feedback to other factors driving a drop in global temperatures. The methane added to the atmosphere from exposed seeps could be double the amount now estimated to result from marine seeps - to 20 - 100 trillion grams (Tg) per year.
This
proposed source of methane helps mitigate problems associated with calling upon
wetlands as a major source of methane during lowered sea level of the Last
Glacial
Maximum
and other glacial periods. Wetlands today are the main source of
non-cultural methane (110 Tg/yr) to the global budget (170 Tg/yr) but geologic
evidence suggests that less extensive wetlands existed prior to the Holocene.
Wetland sources were likely much less significant in Pleistocene compared to
warmer Holocene time. Dryer climate, lowered sea level and lowered water tables
probably reduced wetland areas in glacial compared to interglacial times.
Prior
to the Holocene another source is needed to explain the finding in ice cores of
atmospheric methane concentrations in glacial times that are 50% the
concentrations of interglacial times. Significant methane sources during the
Last Glacial
Maximum
and other glacial periods are likely exposed marine gas
seeps, onshore gas seeps, methane release from continental shelf sediments,
termites, remnant wetlands, fires – and possibly methane from the conversion
of gas hydrates. The implication is that without a major wetland source the
glacial period methane sources were largely thermogenic and 14C
depleted. This proposal can be tested by isotopic studies of air bubbles in ice
cores.
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