Ryo Matsumoto, Yoshihisa Okuda, Akihiro Hiruta, Hitoshi Tomaru, Eiichi Takeuchi, Risa Sanno, Maki Suzuki, Kazuhiro Tsuchinaga, Yasushi Ishida, Osamu Ishizaki, Rika Takeuchi, Junko Komatsubara, Antonio Fernando Freire, Hideaki Machiyama, Chiharu Aoyama, Masato Joshima, Mineo Hiromatsu, Glen Snyder, Hideki Numanami, Mikio Satoh, Yasumochi Matoba, Hiroshi Nakagawa, Yoshitaka Kakuwa, Shigenori Ogihara, Katsunori Yanagawa, Michinari Sunamura, Tadanori Goto, Hailong Lu, Takeshi Kobayashi
JOURNAL OF GEOGRAPHY-CHIGAKU ZASSHI 118(1) 43-71 2009年
A number of extensive methane plumes and active methane seeps associated with large blocks of methane hydrates exposed on the seafloor strongly indicate extremely high methane flux and large accumulations of methane hydrate in shallow sediments of the Umitaka spur and Joetsu knoll of the Joetsu basin 30 km off Joetsu city, Niigata Prefecture. Crater-like depressions, incised valleys, and large but inactive pockmarks also indicate methane activities over the spur and knoll. These features imply strong expulsions of methane gas or methane-bearing fluids, and perhaps lifting and floating-up of large volumes of methane hydrate to the sea surface.High heat flow, similar to 100 mK/m, deposition of organic-rich strata, similar to 1.0 to 1.5% TOC, and Pliocene-Quaternary inversion-tectonics along the eastern margin of the Japan Sea facilitate thermal maturation of organic matters, and generation and migration of light-hydrocarbons through fault conduits, and accumulation of large volumes of methane as methane hydrate in shallow sediments. Microbial methane generation has also contributed to reinforcing the methane flux of the Joetsu basin. Regional methane flux as observed by the depth of the sulfate-methane interface(SMI) is significantly high, < 1 m to 3 m, when compared to classic gas hydrate fields of Blake Ridge, 15 to 20 m, and Nankai trough, 3 to 15 m. delta C-13 of methane hydrate and seep gases are mostly within -30 to -50%, the range of thermogenic methane, while dissolved methane of the interstitial waters a few kilometers away from seep sites are predominated by microbial with delta C-13 of -50 to -100%.Seismic profiles have revealed fault-related, well-developed gas chimney structures, 0.2 to 3.5 km in diameter, on the spur and knoll. The structures are essential for conveying methane from deep-seated sources to shallow depths as well as for accumulating methane hydrate (gas chimney type deposits). The depth of BSR, which represents the base of gas hydrate stability (BGHS), on the spur and knoll is generally 0.20 to 0.23 seconds in two-way-travel time, whereas the BSRs in gas chimneys occur at 0.14 to 0.18 seconds, exhibiting a sharp pull-up structure. The apparent shallow BGHS is due to the accumulation of large volumes of high-velocity methane hydrate in gas chimneys.The depth to BGHS is estimated to be 115 m on an experimentally determined stability diagram, based on an observed thermal gradient of 100 mK/m. Then the velocity of the sediments on the Umitaka spur is calculated to be 1000 m/s, which is anomalously low compared to normal pelagic mud of 1600. 1700 m/s. This exciting finding leads to the important implication that sediments of the Umitaka spur contain significant amounts of free gas, although the sediments are well within the stability field of methane hydrate. The reasons for the existence of free gas in the methane hydrate stability field are not fully explained, but we propose the following possible mechanisms for the unusual co-existence of methane hydrate and free-gas in clay-silt of the spur. (i) High salinity effect of residual waters,(ii) degassing from ascending fluids,(iii) bound water effect and deficiency of free-waters, and(iv) micro-pore effect of porous media. All of these processes relate to the development of gas hydrate deposits of the Umitaka spur.Increased accumulation of methane hydrate(specific gravity similar to 0.91 g/cm(3)) in shallow sediments should have caused a gravity imbalance of methane hydrate bearing sediments, and eventually the methane hydrate blocks lifted and floated up to the sea surface(auto-collapse). Crater-like depressions and valleys are the heritage of such an auto-collapse process.Dark colored, thinly laminated units with a very low abundance of benthic foraminifers occur in 27 to 18 kyrBP, approximately the period of the LGM, indicating low-oxygen, euxinic conditions. Furthermore, delta C-13 of benthic foraminifers from the dark laminated unit exhibits sharp negative excursion toward similar to 21 kyrBP. A sea-level fall of similar to 120 m toward the LGM released the pressure of gas hydrate-bearing sediments, and presumably triggered the dissociation of subsurface methane hydrate, which, in turn, destabilized the entire gas chimney hydrate system, collapsing the gas chimney and leaving large and deep pockmarks.