Hidden
network of methane found on East Coast
A
survey off the North Island's East Coast has uncovered a huge hidden
network of frozen methane and methane gas, along with dozens of
spectacular flares firing up from the seabed.
A
3D image of one section of East Coast seafloor mapped in 3D, complete
with methane deposits and flares. Graphic / GNS
12
May, 2014
The
vast deposit has been revealed by Kiwi and German scientists using
state-of-the-art 3D seismic and echosounder technology to map methane
within the ocean and seafloor.
NIWA
marine geologist and voyage leader Dr Joshu Mountjoy said the number
of gas flares observed beneath the ocean was "phenomenal".
More
than 100 flares, some shooting up columns more than 250m high, were
found in an area of only 50km2, in what is now believed to be the
densest concentration of seafloor gas vents so far known in New
Zealand.
"What
we've found probably equals the number of known underwater seeps in
New Zealand to date," Dr Mountjoy said.
Dr
Mountjoy said the four-week expedition sought to understand what was
triggering huge underwater landslides off the East Coast, some which
had been as large as 15km long and 100m thick.
What
they discovered was direct evidence of widespread gas in the sediment
and ocean, and indications of large areas of methane hydrate,
ice-like frozen methane below the seafloor.
They
also found a hydrate and gas field very different from others known
in New Zealand.
"Previously
all gas venting sites have been in deeper water and associated with
large earthquake faults," Dr Mountjoy said.
"What
we have found is high density methane flares in very shallow water,
as well as gas building up beneath a large landslide and being
released along the landslide margins."
In
a newly submitted scientific paper, the research team proposed that
these landslides might be the seafloor equivalent of glaciers, but
with frozen methane instead of water ice, or that pressurised gas was
causing them to progressively move downslope.
The
findings of the expedition indicated that both could be
possibilities, but also gave an important insight into just how much
methane lurked close to our shores.
Dr
Mountjoy said methane was a highly effective greenhouse gas and
seabed methane release has the potential to dramatically alter the
earth's climate.
As
ocean temperatures changed, the methane hydrate system had the
potential to become unstable.
"In
terms of natural hazards, the occurrence of very large slow
landslides, rather than catastrophic ones, has major implications for
the tsunami generating potential of landslides globally as slow
landslides are unlikely to cause tsunami," he said.
"This
type of slow moving submarine landslide is essentially unknown around
the world, but it is very likely that they do occur widely and are an
important process shaping continental margins."
It
was too early to say whether the methane deposits could prove an
economic resource for the country.
Dr
Mountjoy said the newfound gas were not coming from deep within the
earth's surface or connected to any large reservoirs with commercial
potential.
But
researchers in Japan were investigating how frozen methane could be
converted back into a gas as a potential hydrocarbon resource.
The
expedition forms the first part of a collaborative project between
scientists from New Zealand, Germany, the United States and Malta,
and another is planned for 2016.
No one has anything to say about this? Don't they know what this means? While watching for the Clathrate Gun to go off in the Arctic it went right ahead & fooled us by starting off in New Zealand.
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