Abstract

During the geological survey and prospecting, helium and hydrogen are recognized indicators of minerals, deep-seated faults, seismic activity, and ascending deep fluids. Their anomalous concentrations also serve as a marker of metamorphic processes. Helium survey is applied for tracing deep-seated faults and mapping permeable zones. In this work, the first results of gas geochemical survey in marine sediments and water to study the distribution of helium and hydrogen and their relation with the seismic activity of some geological structures in the southwestern Sea of Okhotsk and northern Sea of Japan. Anomalies of these gases (He up to 60 ppm, H up to 120 ppm) were identified in the hydrate-bearing sediments in the fault zones. It was also found that helium concentrations in the water column of the Tatar Strait are higher than in the studied area of the Sea of Okhotsk, possibly, due to the difference in geological structure and seismotectonic activation. Moreover, coal layers could be a significant source of methane in the gashydrate-bearing layers of the Tatar Strait.

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