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Seabed
Slopes and Bathymetric Waveform Residuals as Quantitative Indices of Vertical
Fluid Migration at Seep Sites in the Northern Gulf of Mexico
By
Richard H. Fillon
Earth Studies Associates, 3730 Rue Nichole, New Orleans, LA 70131
In the northern Gulf of Mexico liquid and gaseous hydrocarbons,
pore water and fluidized mud escape from reservoir intervals deep in the crust
and are temporarily stored in shallow subsurface. The distinctive seabed
morphology and bathymetric relief of seep sites is produced in response to a
number of physical, chemical and biological processes triggered by the migrating
fluids as they arrive near the sediment/water interface. These processes produce
unique geomorphic features: hydrate mounds, authigenic-biogenic carbonate
hardgrounds, fault scarps, and mud volcanoes, readily recognized by direct or
remote visual examination of the seabed. These features, created and augmented
by fluid migration, represent local positive volume anomalies. The magnitude of
these anomalies, measurable on high-resolution
multibeam and 3-D seismic
water-bottom data, may directly correspond to seep activity over timescales of
100 – 10,000 years, based on the longevity of tubeworms, reported 14C dates, and
spatial wavelength correlations with paleoclimatic periodicities recorded in
arctic ice cores and Gulf of Mexico deltaic gamma ray records.
Current investigations
of seeps employ sampling, viewing and sensing strategies measure the character
and flux of escaping fluids. Strategies to identify seep sites regionally employ
seabed 3- D seismic amplitude and waveform mapping. A new approach described
here employs an analysis of seabed waveform residuals derived from
high-resolution
bathymetric surveys to calculate the volume of positive relief
anomalies related to fluid migration induced build-up of mass within seep sites.
The quantitative analysis of relief anomalies in regional datasets also provides
a potentially useful tool for identifying seep sites with predictable precision
and reliability.
Test data from a ~0.3 mi2 seep site in the
Mississippi Canyon protraction area provide an indication of the magnitudes of
relief anomalies caused by hydrate mounds, mud mounds, and chemical-biogenic
precipitates at arbitrarily selected spatial wavelengths of 150 ft, 300 ft and
450 ft. Indicated volumes are 8.4 x 107 ft3, 14.6 x 107 ft3
and 10.2 x 107 ft3, respectively. Hemipelagic sediment volumes
deposited during the likely period of seepage (<4 x 103 ft3) are
negligible. Fourier analysis of the residual relief anomalies at seep sites
provides a means of assessing the naturally occurring geomorphic wavelengths
related to vertical
mass migration. These natural seep wavelengths, which
correspond to morphologic features that formed over different periods of time,
are 350 ft, 450 ft, 500 ft, 550 ft, 650 ft, 1000 ft and 2700 ft. The longer
wavelength features most probably reflect evolution over longer time periods
while the shorter wavelength features reflect development over shorter time
periods. Although the precise relationship between wavelength and time is not
directly determined, Fourier spatial wavelength spectra appear to correlate with
paleoclimatic periodicities recorded in oxygen isotope data from annually
layered Greenland Ice Sheet ice-cores and with 14C and
d18O dated gamma ray records
in Gulf of Mexico deltaic sediment cores. Suggested Fourier spectral
correlations (wavelength = ~periodicity) are as follows: 350 ft = ~1500 yr; 450
ft = ~2600 yr; 500 ft = ~3500 yr; 550 ft = ~4000 yr; 650 ft = ~5000 yr; 1000 ft
= ~7700 yr; and 2700 ft = ~10600 yr. Using this chronology as a guide,
seep-related net
vertical
mass flux values associated with the arbitrarily
selected 150 ft, 300 ft and 450 ft mapped volume anomalies are calculated to be
20.0 x 109 grams/yr, 10.0 x 109 grams/yr, and 2.8 x 109
grams/yr. Therefore, for the seep sites surveyed, the average total flux of gas
(stored as hydrate), extruded mud and chemical-biogenic precipitates over
approximately the last three millennia may be expected to be approximately 3.3 x
1010 grams/yr.