Thursday, 11 December 2014

Hydrate and volcanic activity off NZ coast

Joint New Zealand - German 3D survey reveals massive seabed gas hydrate and methane system
A joint New Zealand-German research team has discovered a huge network of frozen methane and methane gas in sediments and in the ocean near New Zealand’s east coast.

A 3D image of one section of New Zealand's East Coast seafloor mapped in 3D, complete 
with methane deposits and flares. [NIWA]


11 May, 2014

The 16-strong team is using state-of-the-art 3D and 2D seismic and echosounder technology to map both forms of methane within the ocean and beneath the seafloor.

The area off the North Island’s east coast is known to have very large active landslides, up to 15km long and 100m thick, and the team set out to discover what is causing them to move.

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. The team has identified 99 gas flares in a 50 km² area, venting from the seabed in columns up to 250 m high. This is believed to be the densest concentration of seafloor gas vents known in New Zealand. 3D seismic data show that landslides and faults allow the gas built up in the sediment to be released into the ocean.

This discovery reveals 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”, says NIWA marine geologist and voyage leader Dr Joshu Mountjoy.

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 recently submitted scientific paper the team proposed that these landslides might be the seafloor equivalent of glaciers, but with frozen methane instead of water ice, or alternatively that pressurized gas is causing them to progressively move downslope. The results from this expedition indicate that both of these are possibilities and provide data to carefully test these hypotheses.

The expedition took the opportunity to deploy the German research institute GEOMAR’s high resolution 3D seismic equipment known as the P-Cable from NIWA’s research vessel Tangaroa

This equipment is the best available for imaging fluid systems within the seafloor,” says co-leader Professor Sebastian Krastel of the University of Kiel. “The sediment, rocks and fluids we have mapped here are perfectly suited to this equipment, and the area mapped is one of the biggest ever mapped with the P-Cable seismic system.”

The work forms part of a larger project focused on understanding the dynamic interaction of gas hydrates and slow moving active landslides. Dubbed SCHLIP (Submarine Clathrate Hydrate Landslide Imaging Project), ongoing investigations in the project over the next decade will including drilling into the landslides themselves in 2016. This first part of the project, SCHLIP-3D, is a collaboration between NIWA, GNS Science and the University of Auckland from New Zealand, GEOMAR and the University of Kiel from Germany, Oregon State University from the USA, and the University of Malta.

The initial findings are very important”, says Dr Mountjoy. “Methane is a very effective greenhouse gas and seabed methane release has the potential to dramatically alter the earth’s climate. As ocean temperatures change the methane hydrate system has 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”.

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”.

The team set off from Wellington on 14 April and finish the voyage there on 8 May. The work is funded from New Zealand by MBIE and Germany by DFG.


Source

Joint New Zealand - German 3D survey reveals massive seabed gas hydrate and methane system
News Release, May 12, 2014, NIWA (National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research), New Zealand

Related

Pockmarks up to 11 km (6.8 mi) wide, off the coast of New Zealand's South Island, in: 
Sea of Okhotsk

Submarine volcano grows at record rate
A volcano on the seafloor north of New Zealand has grown at a record-breaking rate, says a new study

21 May, 2012


THE MONOWAI CONE volcano, 1000km north of New Zealand, underwent an unprecedented period of growth and collapse in mid-2011, providing new insight into the behaviour of submarine volcanoes.

Over a period of just five days, the volcano spewed out about 8.5 million cubic metres of lava and debris. One portion of the summit grew by a whopping 79m - equivalent to a 26-storey building - while another collapsed by 19m.

The changes were measured by scientists aboard the German research vesselSonne, with the study of the Monowai Cone aided by Dr Cornel de Ronde from GNS Science in New Zealand.

The findings of the three-week survey were published last week in the journalNature Geoscience.

The Monowai Cone


The Kermadec Arc, between New Zealand and Tonga. (Credit: GNS Science)
"There are very few documented examples of volcanoes growing this fast, and they are all from on-land examples - this is the fastest known growing volcano on the bottom of the sea," Cornel told Australian Geographic.

The crew on the Sonne took bathymetric (underwater topographic) measurements of the volcano at two separate times during the survey, about three weeks apart, which is something rare in the study of submarine volcanoes, Cornel says. "Deep sea research is an expensive business, rarely can we go back and re-survey a volcano within a few weeks or during the same expedition."

The Monowai Cone lies at the intersection of the Pacific and Indo-Australian tectonic plates at the Tonga-Kermadec Arc - a 2500km-long chain of volcanoes stretching from New Zealand to Tonga.

According to Dr Richard Arculus from The Australian National University, it is among the most active arc volcanoes in the world.

The importance of submarine volcanoes

"Submarine volcanism in island arcs...is a frontier area of study," Richard says. He commended the researchers for making "accurate, repeat measurements of volcano morphology over a limited period of time as opposed to sporadic and widely spaced mapping efforts."

Studying submarine volcanoes gives us insight into how the seafloor becomes shaped by natural processes, but it can also  offers clues for mining mineral deposits on and.

Cornel says that these kind of studies provide exploration companies "with a better understanding of where to look for these mineral deposits in uplifted terrains of ancient seafloor."

In rare cases these submarine volcanoes could prove hazardous to shipping, Cornel says: "Where the volcanoes are shallow - say less than 400m in depth - they can erupt and expel enormous amounts of gas into the water column, effectively preventing any vessel from floating if they were situated immediately above the volcano." 



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