Modelling persistent methane seepage offshore western Svalbard since early Pleistocene
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/15042Date
2018-01-31Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Knies, Jochen; Daszinnies, Matthias Christian; Plaza-Faverola, Andreia; Chand, Shyam; Sylta, Øyvind; Bünz, Stefan; Johnson, Joel E; Mattingsdal, Rune; Mienert, JurgenAbstract
Recent observations of extensive methane release into the oceans and atmosphere have raised
concern as to whether rising temperatures across the Arctic could drive rapid destabilization
of gas hydrate reservoirs. Here, we report modelling results from hydrate-modulated methane
seepage from Vestnesa Ridge, offshore western Svalbard, suggesting that continuous leakage
has occurred from the seafloor since the early Pleistocene up until today. Sustained by
modelled deep subsurface thermogenic sources of Miocene age, large scale hydrocarbon fluid
migration started ~6 million years ago and reached the seafloor some 4 million years later.
The modelling results indicate that widespread methane seepage offshore western Svalbard
commenced in earnest during early Pleistocene, significantly older than late Holocene as
previously reported. We propose that the onset of vertical hydrocarbon migration is the
response of rapid burial of potential hydrocarbon sources induced by increased sediment
deposition following the onset of Northern Hemisphere glaciations, ~2.7 million years ago.
From the modelling results we propose that source rock intervals capable of generating
hydrocarbons and hydrocarbon reservoirs buried kilometers deep have continuously fueled
the gas hydrate system off western Svalbard for the past 2 million years. It is this hydrocarbon
system that primarily controls the thermogenic methane fluxes and seepage variability at the seabed over geological times.
Description
Accepted manuscript version, licensed CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. Source at: http://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2018.01.020