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Title: A primer on gas hydrates

Journal Article · · United States Geological Survey, Professional Paper; (United States)
OSTI ID:6877298
 [1]
  1. Geological Survey, Menlo Park, CA (United States)

Natural-gas hydrates are ice-like mixtures of gas and water in which the gas molecules, mainly methane, are trapped within a framework of cages, that is within a clathrate, of water molecules. Gas hydrates are stable under pressure and temperature conditions that occur worldwide in two distinct locations: (1) in polar regions, where temperatures are cold enough for onshore and offshore permafrost to be present, and (2) in offshore sediment of outer continental and insular margins, where there are cold bottom-water temperatures and deep waters, exceeding 300 to 500 m. Samples of gas hydrates have been recovered in 14 areas of the world, and geophysical and geochemical evidence for them has been found in about 30 other areas. Many oceanic occurrences of gas hydrates are inferred, mainly on the basis of the appearance on marine seismic-reflection profiles of a pronounced bottom-simulating reflection, commonly called a BSR. BSR's indicating gas hydrates are useful in estimating geothermal gradients and heat flow in oceanic sediments and, in conjunction with other seismic information, in assessing the amount of methane within and below the gas-hydrate interval. During gas-hydrate formation, salt ions are excluded from the crystal structure; therefore pore-water freshening is observed with gas-hydrate occurrence. The total amount of methane in gas hydrates around the world likely exceeds 10[sup 19] g of methane carbon ([approximately] 20x10[sup 15] m[sup 3] of methane gas = [approximately] 7x10[sup 5] trillion cubic feet (Tcf)). Because gas hydrates represent a large amount of methane within 2,000 m of the Earth's surface, they are considered to be an unconventional, potential source of fossil fuel. 51 refs., 11 figs., 1 tab.

OSTI ID:
6877298
Journal Information:
United States Geological Survey, Professional Paper; (United States), Vol. 1570
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

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