New discoveries at Woolsey Mound, MC118, northern Gulf of Mexico.

Lutken, Carol B., Macelloni, Leonardo, Sleeper, Ken, D'Emidio, Marco, McGee, Tom, Simonetti, Antonello, Knapp, James H., Knapp, Camelia C., Caruso, Simona, Chanton, Jeff, Lapham, Laura, Lodi, Mariangela, Ingrassia, Michela, Higley, Paul, Brunner, Charlotte, Camilli, Rich, Battista, Brad, Short, Tim, Bell, Ryan and Fietzek, Peer (2011) New discoveries at Woolsey Mound, MC118, northern Gulf of Mexico. [Paper] In: International Conference on Gas Hydrates, 7th, ICGH 2011. , 17.-21.07.2011, Edinburgh, UK .

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Abstract

Woolsey Mound, a 1km-diameter carbonate-gas hydrate complex in the northern Gulf of Mexico, is the site of the Gulf’s only seafloor monitoring station-observatory in its only research reserve, Mississippi Canyon 118. Active venting, outcropping hydrate, and a thriving chemosynthetic community recommend the site for study. Since 2005, the Gulf of Mexico Hydrates Research Consortium has been conducting multidisciplinary studies to 1. Characterize the site, 2. Establish a facility for real-time monitoring-observing of gas hydrates in a natural setting, 3. Study the effects of gas hydrates on seafloor stability, 4. Establish fluid migration routes and estimates of fluid-flux at the site, 5. Establish the interrelationships between the
organisms at the vent site and the association-dissociation of hydrates. A variety of novel geological, geophysical, geochemical and biological studies has been designed and
conducted, some in survey mode, others in monitoring mode. Geophysical studies involving merging multiple seismic data acquisition systems accompanied by the application of custom processing techniques verify communication of surface features with deep structures. Supporting geological data derive from innovative recovery techniques. Geochemical sensors, used experimentally in survey mode, including aboard an AUV, double as monitoring devices. A suite of pore-fluid sampling devices has returned data that capture change at the site in daily increments; using only noise as an energy source, hydrophones have
returned daily fluctuations in physical properties. Ever-expanding capabilities of a custom-ROV have been determined by research needs. Processing of new as well as conventional data via unconventional means
has resulted in the discovery of new features…..vents, faults, benthic fauna…..and modification of others including pockmarks, hydrate outcrops, vent activity, and water-column chemical plumes.
Though real-time monitoring awaits communications and power link to land, periodic data-collection reveals a carbonate-hydrate mound, part of an immensely complex hydrocarbon system.

Document Type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)
Keywords: Marine chemistry; Woolsey Mound; gas hydrates, plumbing system, Gulf of Mexico, multiple seismic resolution, observatory, seafloor sensors, hydrate stability, seafloor stability
Research affiliation: OceanRep > GEOMAR > FB2 Marine Biogeochemistry > FB2-CH Chemical Oceanography
Date Deposited: 14 Nov 2011 09:03
Last Modified: 07 Sep 2012 11:32
URI: https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/12554

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