[SIO GP Seminars] TODAY: 3:15 PM: Bruce Luyendyk, UCSB
Robin Matoza
rmatoza at ucsd.edu
Fri Nov 17 09:02:33 PST 2006
Geophysics Seminar Reminder.
This week, the seminar will by a joint IGPP-GSMCG seminar held at the
usual IGPP time and location:
========================
Friday, November 17, 3:15 PM
(refreshments served at 3:00 PM)
Munk Conference Room
Bruce Luyendyk, Earth Science Dept., UCSB
Title: "Natural marine hydrocarbon seeps in the northern Santa
Barbara Channel"
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ABSTRACT
Present day hydrocarbon seepage from reservoirs beneath the world’s
continental margins discharge oil and natural gas into the ocean and
atmosphere. Marine seeps have received increasing interest in part
because they indicate the presence of hydrocarbon deposits and
because they are sources of regional ocean and air pollution,
including oil slicks, dissolved oil and hydrocarbon gas in the ocean,
floating oil and beach tar, and methane and reactive organic gases
discharged into the atmosphere.
On the northern continental shelf of the Santa Barbara Channel,
California the Coal Oil Point marine seep field discharges at least
100,000 m3 of gas into the atmosphere and 100 bbl of oil into the
ocean each day. These seepage rates were determined from a
combination of calibrated sonar surveys and in situ gas and oil
capture at the sea surface. At the sea surface the gas is between 60
and 80 percent methane. Oceanographic observations at Coal Oil Point
show that up to half the volume of methane vented at the sea floor
dissolves in the water column during transport of hydrocarbon gas
bubbles 20 to 70 meters to the ocean surface; the remaining half
enters the atmosphere. The Coal Oil Point seep field emits daily at
least 40 metric tons of methane to the atmosphere. d13C values are
between –40 o/oo and –45 o/oo suggesting that the methane is
thermogenic in origin.
Gas flux from the Coal Oil Point seep field can be used to estimate
the total contribution of marine seeps to the global atmospheric
methane budget. The estimates, which range between 18 and 48 Tg/yr,
almost 10% of the world’s budget, were constructed by assuming that
the Coal Oil Point field is one of the larger or largest marine
sources of methane in the world.
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