Datapages, Inc.Print this page

Origins of Hydrocarbon Gas Seeping out from Offshore Mud Volcanoes of the Nile Delta (Egypt)

Eric Deville and Alain Prinzhofer

Gas seepages (free gas or dissolved gas in ground water or brine) are common at the seafloor of the deep water area of the Nile turbiditic system on different mud volcanoes and brine pools. Good gas samples (not contiminated with air) collected with the Nautile submarine show that the gas is wet and includes C1, C2, C3, iC4, nC4, CO2. These gas samples show no evidence of biodegradation which is not the case of the gas present in the deep hydrocarbon accumulations at depth. It indicates that the gas expelled by the mud volcanoes is not issued from direct leakages from deep gas fields. The collected gas samples mainly have a thermogenic origin and show different maturities. Some samples show very high maturities indicating that these seepages are sourced from great depths, below the Messinian salt. Moreover, the different chemical compositions of the gas samples reflect not only differences in maturity but also the fact that the gas finds its origin in different deep source rocks. Carbon dioxide has an organic signature and cannot result from carbonate decomposition or mantle fluids. The crustal-derived radiogenic isotopes show that the analyzed gas samples have suffered a fractionation processes after the production of the radiogenic isotopes, due either to oil occurrence at depth interacting with the flux of gas, and/or fractionation during the fluid migration.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90161©2013 AAPG European Regional Conference, Barcelona, Spain, 8-10 April 2013